CASTING THE CANNON
“Come on!” yelled Ned.
“We’ll see how this experiment came out!”
and he started to run from beneath the shelter of the
hill.
“Hold on!” shouted Tom,
laying a restraining hand on his chum’s shoulder.
“Why, what’s the matter?” asked
Ned in surprise.
“Some of that powder may not
have exploded,” went on the young inventor.
“From the sound made I should say the gun burst,
and, if it did, that gelatin is bound to be scattered
about. There may be a mass of it burning loose
somewhere, and it may go off. It ought not to,
if my theory about it being harmless in the open is
correct, but the trouble is that it’s only a
theory. Wait a few seconds.”
Anxiously they lingered, the echoes
of the blast still in their ears, and a peculiar smell
in their nostrils.
“But there’s no smoke,”
said Mr. Damon. “Bless my spyglass!
I always thought there was smoke at an explosion.”
“This is a sort of smokeless
powder,” explained Tom. “It throws
off a slight vapor when it is ignited, but not much.
I guess it’s safe to go out now. Come on!”
He dropped the pushbutton connected
with the igniting battery, and, followed by the others,
raced to the scene of the experiment. A curious
sight met their eyes.
A great hole had been torn in the
hillside, and another where the improvised gun had
stood. The gun itself seemed to have disappeared.
“Why—why—where is it?”
asked Ned.
“Burst to pieces I guess,”
replied Tom. “I was afraid that charge
was a bit too heavy.”
“No, here it is!” shouted
Mr. Damon, circling off to one side. “It’s
been torn from the carriage, and partly buried in the
ground,” and he indicated a third excavation
in the earth.
It was as he had said. The terrific
blast had sheared the gun from its temporary carriage,
thrown it into the air, and it had come down to bury
itself in the soft ground. The carriage had torn
loose from the concrete base, and was tossed off in
another direction.
“Is the gun shattered?”
asked Tom, anxious to know how the weapon had fared.
It was, in a sense, a sort of small model of the giant
cannon he intended to have cast.
“The breech is cracked a little,”
answered Mr. Damon, who was examining it; “but
otherwise it doesn’t seem to be much damaged.”
“Good cried Tom. “Another
steel jacket will remedy that defect. I guess
I’m on the right road at last. But now to
see what became of that armor plate.”
“Dinner plate not here,”
spoke Koku, who could not understand how there could
be two kind of plates in the world. “Dinner
plate gone, but big hole here, and he indicated one
in the side of the hill.
“I expect that is where the
armor plate is,” said Tom, trying not to laugh
at the mistake of his giant servant. “Take
a look in there, Koku, and, if you can get hold of
it, pull it out for us. I’m afraid the
piece of nickel-steel armor proved too much for my
projectile. But we’ll have a look.”
Koku disappeared into the miniature
cave that had been torn in the side of the bill.
It was barely large enough to allow him to go in.
But Tom knew none other of them could hope to loosen
the piece of steel, imbedded as it must be in the
solid earth.
Presently they heard Koku grunting
and groaning. He seemed to be having quite a
struggle.
“Can you get it, Koku?”
asked Torn. “Or shall I send for picks
and shovels.”
“Me get, Master,” was the muffled answer.
Then came a shout, as though in anger
Koku had dared the buried plate to defy him.
There was a shower of earth at the mouth of the cave,
and the giant staggered out with the heavy piece of
armor plate. At the sight of it Tom uttered a
cry.
“Look!” he shouted.
“My projectile went part way through and then
carried the plate with it into the side of the hill.
Talk about a powerful explosive! I’ve struck
it, all right!”
It was as he had said. The projectile,
driven with almost irresistible force, had bitten
its way through the armor plate, but a projection
at the base of the shell had prevented it from completely
passing through. Then, with the energy almost
unabated, the projectile had torn the plate loose and
hurled it, together with its own body, into the solid
earth of the hillside. There, as Koku held them
up, they could all see the shell imbedded in the plate,
the point sticking out on the other side, as a boy
might spear an apple with a sharp stick.
“Bless my spectacle case!”
cried Mr. Damon. “This is the greatest
ever!”
“It sure is,” agreed Ned.
“Tom, my boy, I guess you can now make the longest
shots on record.”
“I can as soon as I get my giant
cannon, perhaps,” admitted the young inventor.
“I think I have solved the problem of the explosive.
Now to work on the cannon.”
An examination of the gauges, which,
being attached to the cannon and plate by electric
wires, were not damaged when the blast came, showed
that Tom’s wildest hopes had been confirmed.
He had the most powerful explosive ever made—or
at least as far as he had any knowledge, and he had
had samples of all the best makes.
Concerning Tom’s powder, or
explosive, I will only say that he kept the formula
of it secret from all save his father. All that
he would admit, when the government experts asked him
about it, later, was that the base was not nitro-glycerine,
but that this entered into it. He agreed, however,
in case his gun was accepted by the government, to
disclose the secret to the ordnance officers.
But Tom’s work was only half
done. It was one thing to have a powerful explosive,
but there must be some means of utilizing it safely—some
cannon in which it could be fired to send a projectile
farther than any cannon had ever sent one. And
to do this much work was necessary.
Tom figured and planned, far into
the night, for many weeks after that. He had
to begin all over again, working from the basis of
the power of his new explosive. And he had many
new problems to figure out.
But finally he had constructed—on
paper—a gun that was to his liking.
The most exhaustive figuring proved that it had a margin
of safety that would obviate all danger of its bursting,
even with an accidental over-charge.
“And the next thing is to get
the gun cast,” said Tom to Ned one day.
“Are you going to do it in your
shops?” his chum asked.
“No; it would be out of the
question for me. I haven’t the facilities.
I’m going to give the contract to the Universal
Steel Company. We’ll pay them a visit in
a day or two.”
But even the great facilities of the
steel corporation proved almost inadequate for Tom’s
giant cannon. When he showed the drawings, on
which he had already secured a patent, the manager
balked.
“We can’t cast that gun here!” he
said.
“Oh, yes, you can!” declared
Tom, who had inspected the plant. “I’ll
show you how.”
“Why, we haven’t a mould
big enough for the central core,” was another
objection.
“Then we’ll make one,”
declared Tom “We’ll dig a pit in the earth,
and after it is properly lined we can make the cast
there.”
“I never thought of that!”
exclaimed the manager. “Perhaps it can
be done.”
“Of course it can!” cried
Tom. “Do you think you can shrink on the
jackets, and rifle the central tube?”
“Oh, yes, we can do that.
The initial cast was what stumped me. But we’ll
go ahead now.”
“And you can wind the breech
with wire, and braze it on; can’t you?”
persisted Tom.
“Yes, I think so. Are you
going to have a wire-wound gun?”
“That, in combination with a
steel-jacketed one. I’m going to take no
chances with ’Swiftite’!” laughed
Tom, for so he had named his new explosive, in honor
of his father, who had helped him with the formula.
“It must be mighty powerful,”
exclaimed the manager.
“It is,” said Tom, simply.
I am not going to tire my readers
with the details leading up to the casting of Tom’s
big cannon. Sufficient to say that the general
plan, in brief, was this: A hole would be dug
in the earth, in the center of the largest casting
shop—a hole as deep as the gun was to be
long. This was about one hundred feet, though
the gun, when finished, would be somewhat shorter than
this. An allowance was to be made for cutting.
In the center of this hole would be
a small “core” made of asbestos and concrete
mixed. Around this would be poured the molten
steel from great caldrons. It would flow into
the hole. The sides of earth—lined
with fire-clay—would hold it in, and the
middle core would make a hole throughout the length
of the central part of the gun. Afterward this
hole would be bored and rifled to the proper calibre.
After this central part was done,
steel jackets or sleeves would be put on, red-hot,
and allowed to shrink. Then would come a winding
of wire, to further strengthen the tube, and then more
sleeves or jackets. In this way the gun would
be made very strong.
As the greatest pressure would come
at the breech, or in the powder chamber there, the
gun would be thickest at this point, decreasing in
size to the muzzle.
It took many weary weeks to get ready
for the first cast, but finally Tom received word
that it was to be made, and with Ned, and Mr. Damon,
he proceeded to the plant of the steel concern.
There was some delay, but finally
the manager gave the word. Tom and his friends,
standing on a high gallery, watched the tapping of
the combined furnaces that were to let the molten
steel into the caldrons. There were several of
these, and their melted contents were to be poured
into the mould at the same time.
Out gushed the liquid steel, giving
off a myriad of sparks. The workers, as well
as the visitors, had to wear violet-tinted glasses
to protect their eyes from the glare.
“Hoist away!” cried the
manager, and the electric cranes started off with
the caldrons of liquid fire, weighing many tons.
“Pour!” came the command,
and into the pit in the earth splashed the melted
steel that was to form the big cannon. From each
caldron there issued a stream of liquid metal of intense
heat. There were numerous explosions as the air
bubbles burst— explosions almost like a
battery in action.
“So far so good!” exclaimed
the manager, with a sigh of relief as the last of
the melted stuff ran into the mould. “Now,
when it cools, which won’t be for some days,
we’ll see what we have.”
“I hope it contains no flaws,”
spoke Tom, “That is the worst of big guns—you
never can tell when a flaw will develop. But I
hope—”
Tom was interrupted by the sound of
a dispute at one of the outer doors of the shop.
“But I tell you I must go in—I
belong here in!” a voice cried. It had
a German accent, and at the sound of it Tom and Ned
looked at each other.
“Who is there?” asked
the manager sharply of the foreman..
“Oh, a crazy German. He
belongs in one of the other shops, and I guess he’s
mixed up. He thinks he belongs here. I sent
him about his business.”
“That is right,” remarked
the manager. “I gave orders, at your request,”
he said to Tom, “that no one but the men in this
part of the plant were to be present at the casting.
I cant understand what that fellow wanted.”
“I think I can,” murmured Tom, to himself.