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William Falconer's Dictionary of the Marine |
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Table of Contents
C CABIN to To CALK, or CAULK CALL to CANNON CALL CALM Dead-CALM CAMBERED-DECK CAN-BUOY CAN-HOOKS CANNON CANNON to CANOE CANOE to To rig the CAPSTERN Surge the CAPSTERN to CARPENTER of a ship CARTEL to CATS-PAW CAULKING to CHANNEL CHANNELS to CHEARLY CHEEKS of the mast to CLINCH CLINCHER-WORK to COASTING-PILOT COAT to COLLIERS COLOURS to COMPASS COMPASSING to COVE COUNTER to CRAWL CREEPER to CROW-FOOT CROWNING to CUT-WATER Search Contact us |
CANNON
CANNON, a well known piece of artillery, mounted in battery on the decks of a ship, and used in all naval engagements. This engine has already been so accurately described by a varicty of authors, that it may seem unnecessary to give a particular description of it here. As it forms, however, so important an article in all the military operations of the marine, it cannot, consistently with our plan, be omitted in this place. CANNON then may be defined a long, conical fire-arm of brass or iron, concave within, and smaller at the muzzle, or face, than at the opposite end. The principal parts of a sea-cannon, as represented in plate VII. fig. 3. are, 1st. The breech, A C, and it's button, or cascabel, A C, called by seamen the pomiglion. The breech is generally understood to be the solid metal from the bottom of the concave cylinder to the cascabel, which is the extremity of the cannon opposite to it's muzzle. 2d. The trunnions, T, which project on each side like arms, and serve to support the cannon near the middle of it's length: on these it may be poised, and held almost in equilibrio. As the metal is thicker at the breech than towards the mouth, the trunnions are placed nearer to that end than the other. 3d. The bore, or caliber, which is comprehended between the dotted lines, and particularly expressed in the longitudinal section of a thirty-two pounder, fig. 15. This represents the interior or concave cylinder, wherein the powder and shot are lodged with which the cannon is charged: the entrance of the bore is called the mouth. Names of the other parts, including the above plate VII. Fig. 3.
© Derived from Thomas Cadell's new corrected edition, London: 1780, page 61, 2003 Prepared by Paul Turnbull http://southseas.nla.gov.au/refs/falc/0262.html |