Subject: Displaying iron cannon
Jason M. Burns <oldcitymaritime [at] yahoo__com> writes >What is the preferred method of displaying iron cannon outdoors >today? I have been asked to look at a few cannons here locally >displayed. Concrete plugs installed in the barrels of two 18th >Century iron cannons are obviously not working and allowing water to >get into the barrels. What materials are being used to seal the >barrels for display? I'm responsible for about sixty cannons on display and in store in Hong Kong both in public places and museums. I did contact some museums in the UK and got from one a good, but fairly complicated, design that involved a circular disc with a screw threaded bar that meets the disc perpendicularly on the screw thread is a disc. If you imagine that the disc is like a table top, it then had 4 triangular legs. So by tightening the screw from the outside, the inside disc pushes on the hypotenuse of the triangle of the 4 legs, this pushes the legs out and this grabs the inside of the barrel. I have only made a demonstration model out of card of this method. I usually cut 2 thick perspex/plexiglass discs (tompions) to fit in the cannon about 2 inches inside the barrel, I paint both sides black, as most of my cannons are painted black (CF Henry Ford and the Rolling Stones.) Doing this means if a tompion is scratched, it is still black. I put in the barrel a textile sausage containing blue silica gel, this often snags on rust on the way in, so I surround the sausage in Melinex, polyester film, and push the sausage and film in, I then pull the Melinex out. The tompions are then stuck in, I apply two as a failsafe, and attach them in place with rapid setting epoxy adhesive, coloured black with epoxy adhesive pigment, (Araldite). The amount of the circumference that I stick is proportional to the situation where the cannon will be displayed, I do epoxy the base as there will sometimes be a small puddle of water collected there. To fill the remaining gaps, I seal the gap with black silicon rubber. I have thought of but not yet tried putting in between the two tompions, one plastic bag inside another bag and filling it with expanding polyurethane foam. This would give further protection to the inside from vandals and the elements. This system seems to be effective, in that the inside of gun barrels are difficult to remove corrosion from and so by putting in the silica gel, it helps keep it dry and inactive. The tompion is inside the barrel, and so is not too intrusive, if the barrel were to de displayed at an angle, I would have the tompion closer to the mouth to stop rainwater collecting in a puddle there. Many tompions are right at the muzzle of the gun and may interfere with the proper appreciation of it. It also 'buries' blue silica gel, that is a health concern about. I have only ever had to do minor repairs to two tompions so far, (they were done by the prototype of this method) Paul Harrison Metal Conservator Hong Kong Govt. *** Conservation DistList Instance 16:25 Distributed: Wednesday, October 2, 2002 Message Id: cdl-16-25-001 ***Received on Friday, 27 September, 2002