Cool Pirate Math: How to Aim a Cannon | Pirate Weaponry

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  • Опубликовано: 4 окт 2024

Комментарии • 350

  • @GoldandGunpowder
    @GoldandGunpowder  Год назад +244

    Note that this video is an explanation of the methods which Sea-Gunners in the Age of Sail learned from contemporary manuals to operate their artillery. It is not a modern ballistics video, which means some things will be wrong when compared to the science we have available today. Nothing of what I presented in this video are "my opinions". I condense and relay information from period documents and modern historical books into a more digestible format.

    • @teotosgaming6663
      @teotosgaming6663 Год назад

      😊😊😊😊

    • @zacablaster
      @zacablaster Год назад +7

      That's like the best part of your format. Your videos are essentially what pirate HR would have produced had they been able to

    • @horehoundbasedcandy8736
      @horehoundbasedcandy8736 Год назад +1

      @@zacablaster”One-Eye-Billy was it? Yes, we’re having this meeting today because your coworker claims you called her a “beautiful lady”, this type of language will not be tolerated here on the Devils Revenge. Esmerelda has asked us to speak with you to explain that she is a professional prostitute with certain standards. If this happens again, you may be looking at a standard plank walk.”

    • @TheGoodCrusader
      @TheGoodCrusader Год назад +1

      I've been playing assassin's Creed black flag and it's a very fun game, I think some of the ship "Upgrades" are kinda goofy. So I'd like to know what you think of them, their version of forward facing cannons, a reinforced ram on the front of the ship and a few other things like that. And if not, then I'd like to know what you think of the british and Spanish ships, naval forts and weapons that are shown in the game.

    • @shaynewheeler9249
      @shaynewheeler9249 Год назад

      Pirate cannon 😊

  • @gra4279
    @gra4279 Год назад +520

    When you're using a sight, you want the front post to be thin so you can see more of what you're shooting at

    • @rachdarastrix5251
      @rachdarastrix5251 Год назад +17

      Hey I just noticed, most cannons don't have an aiming sight. Now isn't that odd?

    • @ianbelletti6241
      @ianbelletti6241 Год назад +13

      ​@@tatumergo3931that's why you find many of them having the barrel filled with concrete/mortar.

    • @austinwilson1765
      @austinwilson1765 Год назад +4

      Not necessarily. This is an artillery weapon. The larger sight allows for marking on drift (not every cannon was of a straight and perfect quality when cast) and when covering a target allows for the knowing maximum affect of the shot (not every cannonball was full iron, some were explosive shell, some were case or grape shot).

    • @gra4279
      @gra4279 Год назад +2

      @austinwilson1765 They had charts on the gun rails that the main gunner was responsible for double checking every cannon before firing. They had all of the values available so there was minimal guess work. While you are partially correct, the distance values you are referring to were already charted and in use to make firing broadside a more smooth and efficient maneuver.

    • @david52875
      @david52875 Год назад +4

      Aim small miss small

  • @joaog.9497
    @joaog.9497 Год назад +830

    These thumbnails lmao

  • @Nero_Karel
    @Nero_Karel Год назад +270

    I imagine some gunner's quadrants were made with six instead of ten marks because six is (obviously) half a dozen and back then there were still a lot more people who preferred the duodecimal over the decimal system for everyday use

    • @onik7000
      @onik7000 Год назад +21

      And it's much easier to repair. Or to make new one. It's really hard to divide 1/8 th of circle 10 times without proper tools. And it's pretty easy to divide it 6 (or 8 times).

    • @mrfancypanzer549
      @mrfancypanzer549 Год назад +9

      Its kind of odd that they used decimal for calibers but pretty much nowhere else until much later, the Brits didnt use decimal currency until like the 70s.

    • @LawrenceTimme
      @LawrenceTimme Год назад +16

      And there are 360 degrees in a circle which is easier to divide by 6 rather than 10.

    • @formdoggie5
      @formdoggie5 Год назад +4

      ​@@LawrenceTimme this is the real reason why

    • @CrizzyEyes
      @CrizzyEyes Год назад +3

      @@mrfancypanzer549 The Brits preferred an accounting system based on 12 for a very long time because it has many factors. 2, 3, 4 and 6. 10 only has 2 and 5.

  • @Kav82a
    @Kav82a Год назад +116

    As a former artillery officer I can confirm that the information given about the basics of aiming is very accurate. I would also like to add two more factors that made aiming hard. 1. the material ( Iron lead) and type of the projectile. ( ball,grapeshot etc.)
    2. The quality of the gunpowder as different mixtures give different results.

    • @GoldandGunpowder
      @GoldandGunpowder  Год назад +11

      I've discussed ammunition in the previous episode: ruclips.net/video/qmwzlP5rx7s/видео.html

    • @Kav82a
      @Kav82a Год назад +7

      @@GoldandGunpowder And I also liked that video. I am mentioning ammunition here as one of the factors that made aiming process difficult. Firing different types of ammunition from a gun with rudimentary sights requires a lot of practice.

    • @R3TR0J4N
      @R3TR0J4N Год назад

      me guessing and assuming that those gunpowder at the time got some sea water

  • @Alex-cw3rz
    @Alex-cw3rz Год назад +211

    Although after the golden of piracy, when talking about aiming the cannon it reminds me of Captain Philip Brokes who made some fascintng innovations to his ship HMS Shannon. Such as having adjustable tangent sights that would give accuracy at different ranges. He had the elevating 'quoins' (wedge-shaped pieces of wood placed under the breech) of his long guns grooved to mark various degrees of elevation so that his guns could be reliably elevated. As the decks of ships back then curved upwards towards the stern and bows, he cut down the wheels on the "up-slope" side of each cannon's carriage in order that all guns were level with the horizon. He also introduced a system where bearings were incised into the deck next to each gun; fire could then be directed to any bearing independent of the ability of any particular gun crew to see the target. Fire from the whole battery could also be focused on any part of an enemy ship. Broke also drilled his crew to an extremely high standard of naval gunnery, he regularly had them fire at targets, such as floating barrels. He even had his gun crews fire at targets without them being allowed to look at the target, they were only given the bearing to lay their gun on without being allowed to sight the gun on the target themselves. This constituted a very early example of director fire control. He would also use one of his long 9 pounder guns as a short of giant sniper rifle that would be aimed at specific parts of the ship such as the Helm to blast anyway anyone who tried to use it and blast away the wheel itself. All this meant that when HMS Shannon fought USS Cheaspeake in an exceptionally short gunnery duel, Shannon handly beat her opponent and landed 4 times as many rounds on the opponent.

    • @IDNeon357
      @IDNeon357 Год назад

      The Chesapeake was engaged at such close range that none of this probably mattered...and while his imagination was i n the future of gunnery the actual results were probably more haphazard due to so many factors.
      One that stands out is the idea of bearing. While a good concept, firecontrol has to have a separate bearing for each position because bearing does change quite a lot at range across the length of a football field

    • @Alex-cw3rz
      @Alex-cw3rz Год назад +20

      ​​​@@IDNeon357hy would you make a comment when you know nothing about the Battle. All accounts show that the training made a huge difference, two of the reasons for hitting the cheaspeake 4 times, was faster reload times and the fact the Americans who were also well drilled but nowhere close to the Shannon were hitting the water not Shannon more often than the Shannon's crew did that to Cheasepeake. The reason the gunnery duel was so short was because Cheasepeake had totally lost control due to the 9 pounder destroying the wheel. In fact this battle was a prime example of how great his innovations were. There is so much more the wiki page which is all sourced is actually a very good account of the Battle that you should look up.
      You don't understand how the bearings worked. The captain didn't say bearing 180 degrees, they would say directions in reaction to the ship as a whole I.e. something like 200 yards and 6 points off standard bow and the crew at each gun would move it to their specific bearings. I do find it baffling and quite risible that you sitting in your bedroom think you know better and noticed this flaw, but non of the crew who actually trained using the system did. Next time maybe wonder have you not understood correctly rather than presuming the people who drilled it 100s of times and used it in Battle where it inflicted huge loses on the enemy in the specific parts they aimed got it wrong.

    • @AllisterCaine
      @AllisterCaine Год назад +4

      ​@@Alex-cw3rzI wonder if he thought of something like convergence, but I guess you wanted to hit the ship in many places not just one.
      Concentration of fire would have been a concept when those ships came so close to each other.
      But the guns may have kept firing even if the bridge is nothing but a stack of split wood.

    • @Alex-cw3rz
      @Alex-cw3rz Год назад +8

      @@AllisterCaine that would only be an issue if they didn't take that into account, which they did, that's why distance as well as position in relation to the ship was relayed to the men.
      Yes but how Shannon did it was aiming at specific gun ports then working down the ship so that the concentration of fire would be more likely to dislodge a cannon and it meant guns on the enemy ship at poor angles to get a shot at Shannon were not having wasted fire upon them.
      The guns would keep firing but because the cheaspeake had lost control it was easy for Shannon to move in position outside of the field of fire of those guns. It doesn't matter that much but, just an interesting fact they didn't have bridges back then.

    • @freedomofpeach9790
      @freedomofpeach9790 Год назад +1

      @@AllisterCaine Yes that is really something I am used to in fighter aircraft and flight sims and mech combat games. Would be cool to use that on pirate ships to have more lead on specific targets, like helm or masts. More concentrated firepower. Though since the firing line is perpendicular to the direction the ship is moving im not sure if it would be useful for more than one volley if both ships were moving at different headings. for broadside duals with ships going the same direction convergence could be very useful. Ill see if I can train my pirate crew on Sea of Thieves to use this. As captain I just kinda call out what I want the gunners to aim at during battle in any given situation. Like enemy masts or enemy cannon lines to knock them off guns or kill the enemy gunners with balls to the face.

  • @Dataism
    @Dataism Год назад +116

    Unironically one of the best videos on naval artillery.

  • @wayrrior
    @wayrrior Год назад +64

    One thing I'm looking forward to is general pirate strategy/course of action, or maybe how to defend against them. Awesome video as always.

    • @GoldandGunpowder
      @GoldandGunpowder  Год назад +41

      I intend to make a series on both topics but I want to tackle all the weapon systems first. Since the artillery series has performed so well I intend to make similar series on the other weapons, so an entire month dedicated to small arms, one for melee weapons, etc

    • @allamasadi7970
      @allamasadi7970 Год назад +7

      ​@@GoldandGunpowderlooking forward to it😊

  • @juncheok8579
    @juncheok8579 Год назад +84

    10:10 unless there's something I'm missing, 180 is correct. If 45° elevation gives an increase of 1800 (200+1800=2000) then 1 quadrant would be 180

  • @guidokorber2866
    @guidokorber2866 Год назад +29

    A cannonball never goes straight, it starts to drop the moment it leaves the muzzle. But since the drop is an accelerated movement initially that does not make much of a difference.

  • @zacharyreid7557
    @zacharyreid7557 Год назад +2

    seeing ballistic table charts for cannons from several hundred years ago was something i never expected. That is facinating

  • @pboogie3472
    @pboogie3472 Год назад +2

    I’ll happen upon channels and vids like this every once in a while… ugh. I love this stuff. Creators just making content about the things they have knowledge on and find interesting. No begging for subscribers, no clickbait, no nothin. Thank you 🙏

  • @merafirewing6591
    @merafirewing6591 Год назад +17

    I did read one of the Destroyermen books, even though it's an alternate history book. It does give very good details of what a cannonball can do to very thin steel and especially what it does when it strikes humans. Definitely a very brutal way to go.

    • @thecocktailian2091
      @thecocktailian2091 Год назад +1

      Of course the vast majority of casualties came from the shrapnel when the ball hit the hull.

    • @beshkodiak
      @beshkodiak Год назад +7

      Sir, any way to go that does not include sex, wine, and a soft bed is brutal. At 72, i have learned this by hard lessons.

  • @insertyournamehere4328
    @insertyournamehere4328 Год назад +9

    Ballistics in Renaissance was surprisingly sophisticated considering the oldness of time.
    Nicolo Fontana ‘Tartaglia’ even already knew a trajectory of cannonball isn’t utterly depicting parabola in the air, but composited from linear and curve.
    His method wasn’t a formula which considered the drag of air and gravity acceleration as the parts of equation but a geometric approximation, though it could give projectiles’ trajectories which were quite similar to real those by calculations on papers

    • @kovona
      @kovona Год назад +3

      Even going back to antiquity, the Romans and Greeks were using formulas with root cubes to design their torsion weapons. Artillery has always been a military field a step ahead of the rest.

    • @naverilllang
      @naverilllang Год назад +1

      The progress of science and warfare have always gone hand in hand

  • @darbyl3872
    @darbyl3872 Год назад +6

    This video has several of my favorite elements in a video. There is an instructional quote, a math formula, scientific concepts that can be applied to real life, graphics that help explain the concepts, and interesting historical examples. I could watch these for hours.

  • @jasonmeldon3229
    @jasonmeldon3229 Год назад +8

    I own replica 17th century cannons and do a lot of historical talks about them, and yes they are live, must say your videos are very informative and factual, keep up the good work,

    • @jasonmeldon3229
      @jasonmeldon3229 Год назад

      @Drekken-ow4kn yes I fire them on a regular basis, small hole on the out side and large hole on the inside splintering the wood

  • @irisallender6796
    @irisallender6796 Год назад +18

    i'm so shocked this channel isn't larger. very educational!

  • @blackhawkdown342
    @blackhawkdown342 Год назад +9

    Great video! I always hated math growing up but I feel like including this would have massively boosted my interest in the subject.

    • @bruhman5829
      @bruhman5829 Год назад

      imagine if all the math questions for kids were about shit like this. “Blackbeard has sighted a Royal Navy ship 100 meters away. If his cannon fires in a 30° arc, at what angle should Blackbeard fire?”

  • @ged1798
    @ged1798 Год назад +3

    Jesse… we have to calculate ((AR/10) -(MIR/100))°7+FBR
    & Currset mark on the quadrant
    Culverin esample:
    MR. 2000 X: 2 PBR 200
    (2000/10) = 200 - 20 (2000/100)
    = 180°2 = 360+200 = 560 yards

  • @michaelnoland2017
    @michaelnoland2017 Год назад +16

    Love the video, definitely learned something I’d never thought of before. I think a video on pirate discipline and punishment on the ship would be a cool video for the future.

  • @joeerickson516
    @joeerickson516 Год назад +1

    "Bearing on zero, zero,0⃣ nine,9⃣ hundred, 💯 yards, on the iron cannonball's trajectory?" "Long range?"

  • @simba4805
    @simba4805 Год назад +5

    Bit iffy on the math notation there, but generally close enough to use. If a cannon shoots 2000 yards at 45° (max range) and 200 yards at 0° (point blank), the total difference elevating the gun does is 1800 yards. If you divide the angle from 0° to 45° into ten sections, each of them is going to add about one tenth (180 yards) of distance. (It's actually a bit more complicated than that, but I'm not sure you'd actually notice much of a difference with wooden tools on a moving ship shooting at a moving target both affected by the swell of the sea.)
    So, to figure out how far the gun will shoot at what mark you'd calculate d (the total distance) = 200 yards (PBR) + x*180 yards (one tenth of the difference between MR and PBR), with x being the number of marks your quadrant shows (with a maximum of ten at 45°). Or, more generally, d = PBR + x * ((MR-PBR)/10), which you could simplify by assuming that PBR = MR/10, leading to d = MR/10 + x * 9MR/100. This is also where you can see that dividing the space from 0° to 45° into 9 equal pieces would've resulted in a little friendlier calculations as each new mark would just add a tenth of MR (200 yards) instead of nine hundredths (180 yards) but that only works if the max range really is ten times the point blank range.
    However, I would assume the real question a gunner was trying to solve was how to aim their gun to hit a target at a given distance. So, you'd try to solve the above equation for x, leading to: x = 10* (d - PBR)/(MR-PBR) - or in your example: x = 10 * (560 yards - 200 yards)/(2000 yards - 200 yards) = 10 * 360yards / 1800 yards = 2. (Obviously, in a real world example the distance wouldn't line up so neatly and you'd get an answer as a fraction between two marks.)
    Cheers, Dreadbeard

  • @michaelleblanc7283
    @michaelleblanc7283 Год назад +2

    Who ever you are 'Gold & Gunpowder' I like your style and have been binging on you since I boarded your Pirate ship.
    For your demo stats I'm from the Davy Crockett /Treasure Island boomer age & got much of my education from 'Mark Twain' who once said of his youth, " Now and then we had a hope that if we lived and were good, God would permit us to be pirates. "

  • @Lyoishi
    @Lyoishi Год назад

    Finally, the real content I need on the internet, basic piracy education.

  • @dennistate5953
    @dennistate5953 Год назад +1

    What a cask of shot! Well gunned Sir!

  • @slasher9436
    @slasher9436 3 месяца назад +1

    thank you for the tips and tricks finally me and Blackbeard can pull up on the ops and proceed with the sail by. This informational video has made my highly intelligent brain begin to process the incredible difficulties that come with aiming a high Calabar rounds and super high speeds. Yet again i would like to favour your odds and thank you for the informational and highly helpful video you have shown us. Please send a pigeon back when you have the available time yours truly whitebeard🐺🐺

  • @HEKVT
    @HEKVT Год назад

    I'm just glad RUclips recommended this to me, this is awesome.

  • @DaveSwart
    @DaveSwart 8 месяцев назад +1

    Wow 12:30 what an eloquent instruction.

  • @woahdudeitsme9742
    @woahdudeitsme9742 Год назад +1

    As someone who has recreationally studied mathematics it is indeed magic.

  • @DivineDawn
    @DivineDawn Год назад

    Just what me and the boys needed! now well be proply prepared when them landlubbers come round again!

  • @willmcclard206
    @willmcclard206 Год назад +2

    As a pirate, I can confirm this is how we shoot cannons.

  • @thezachlambert
    @thezachlambert Год назад

    One of the best video titles I've ever seen. Well done matey.

  • @ClashBluelight
    @ClashBluelight Год назад

    John Seller just hit us with the hardest "get good" fused with the longest "skill issue" in history.

  • @joaovs580
    @joaovs580 Год назад +2

    Because you never know when this will become useful

  • @kinggerr7093
    @kinggerr7093 Год назад +6

    This honestly sounds like kinetics but in a fantasy world. It really does seem magical when you take away all the modern understandings. It works, kinda, but works without understanding the very very fundamentals. Interesting that the man that became newton wasnt a gunner that felt there was more to what he saw

  • @joshuab4586
    @joshuab4586 Год назад +2

    I find the last guys advice fitting, I play a lot of Sea of Thieves, a pirate game where you have to fight other people, and I always get asked how to aim cannons well and I always say it just takes instinct and practice to learn how to aim them properly cuz of all the variables.

  • @jameswatson5011
    @jameswatson5011 Год назад +3

    The ART of ballistics. You have to KNOW the velocity of your projectile, the range drop of rate , and add in the rise fall and lateral movement of the ship platform. Ideally you want to have two of best three cannon hitting roughly the same spot at the same time for maximum impact. (The force is not doubling it's exponential and maxes out at three.) There are three words that make the most of your gunnery. Practice, practice and practice.

  • @thxobama
    @thxobama Год назад +2

    How to aim a cannon: "if you're shooting too low, shoot higher"

  • @tristanknowlton3903
    @tristanknowlton3903 Год назад +5

    Just recently became a fan and I can’t stop watching these videos. You should do a video on marooning and other punishments of age of piracy. That would be fascinating!

  • @GeebusCrust
    @GeebusCrust Год назад

    Opening quote translation: "Ocean's unpredictable, sometimes you just miss. You'll get it with practice"

  • @ricknerinfantry
    @ricknerinfantry Год назад +2

    Here's all the math to fire your weapon and keep us alive....but there is so much going on, most of the math won't work quite like you want, just fire the thing and get some experience. And don't miss; our lives, but mostly yours, depend on it. No pressure.
    Edward teach

  • @bentramer682
    @bentramer682 Год назад +1

    Now I'm ready to ignite a cannon with my cigar

  • @everflores8252
    @everflores8252 Год назад +4

    Looking forward to it! Love your channel always makes me happy to see another passionate fan of Pirates! 😁

    • @joeerickson516
      @joeerickson516 Год назад +3

      "15 and a dead,☠️ man's,👨chest!"🌰 "Yo ho ho, and a bottle,🍾 of rum!"🥃 🏴‍☠️ ☠️ 🦜

    • @joeerickson516
      @joeerickson516 Год назад +1

      "Drink,🍻 and the devil,👿 will done the rest!"🍴 "Yo ho ho, and a bottle, 🍾 of rum!"🥃 🏴‍☠️ ☠️ 🦜

    • @joeerickson516
      @joeerickson516 Год назад +1

      "We're devils,👿 black,🖤 sheep,🐑 and really bad,🤮 eggs!"🥚 "Drink,🍻 up,👆 me hearties,❤ yo ho!" 🏴‍☠️ ☠️ 🦜

    • @joeerickson516
      @joeerickson516 Год назад +1

      "You are a pirate!" 🏴‍☠️ ☠️ 🦜

    • @joeerickson516
      @joeerickson516 Год назад +2

      "Arrgh!" 🏴‍☠️ ☠️ 🦜

  • @pat6091
    @pat6091 Год назад +1

    Recently found out cannons are legal to buy, this comes in handy

  • @richardcranium2581
    @richardcranium2581 Год назад

    Your video was great. Now my blackpowder golfball cannon is accurate. Thank you!

  • @lowercase3635
    @lowercase3635 Год назад

    I never thought I needed this channel but I subbed anyways. This content is awesome 🏴‍☠️

  • @molochi
    @molochi Год назад +1

    I have read and heard in several videos recently that muskets were only "effective" out to about 50 or100 or 150 yards, but for anyone firing one today, they should know that a musket ball fired over black powder (even homemade medieval repro powder) with only a ~1000fps or ~300Mps muzzle velocity, can be lethal at a much greater distance for anyone who happens to be in its path. Lead round ball has a much lower ballistic coefficient than modern cylindrical bullet shapes but at .69 caliber a 1 ounce lead ball will still be traveling at several hundred feet per second (and more than 100Mps) at 400 meters and retaining like 185 joules of energy. If someone's head or heart happens to intersect that path they are probably gonna die. So make sure you have a backstop or a hill to shoot into.

  • @Twisted_Logic
    @Twisted_Logic Год назад +2

    I can't imagine that ground-based artillery is principally all that different in operation, and it really brings into focus just how skilled Napoleonic era horse artillerymen were. They could reportedly dismount, load, aim, fire, and be off in a matter of minutes. All while on an active battlefield

  • @elischultes6587
    @elischultes6587 Год назад +1

    Having tinkered with some bowling ball mortars on 24 lbs land based limbers shot fit is important. Same charge with a slightly loose ball changes a lot.

  • @slorbsdasit2586
    @slorbsdasit2586 Год назад

    Ah yes, I was missing this from my library of useful knowledge

  • @StoicHistorian
    @StoicHistorian Год назад +1

    Love the title for this one. Had me cackling

  • @jasonck9635
    @jasonck9635 Год назад

    I like seeing the devices they used for measurement , but it worked exactly as I thought it did !

  • @malcolmliang
    @malcolmliang Год назад +1

    Thanks, if I ever have to operate cannons on a pirate ship I am adequately ready to operate the cannon safely with efficiency.

  • @allamasadi7970
    @allamasadi7970 Год назад +2

    Hopefully it's not the last video on cannons as it was such a good video 😊

  • @MacElMasMancoDeTodos
    @MacElMasMancoDeTodos Год назад +1

    New knowledge archived

  • @GoldenMinotaur
    @GoldenMinotaur Год назад

    Congratulations, that is officially the fastest I've ever been sent back to the beginning of a series without watching the entire video that I landed on. Great introduction haha

  • @vinayakonimani7628
    @vinayakonimani7628 Год назад

    Indeed everyone must know how to aim a canon just in case. Great tutorial.

  • @TheGrenadier97
    @TheGrenadier97 Год назад +1

    The thumbnail has a scene from the Treasure Island of 1990, starred by a younger Christian Bale. It's a very entertaining little gem that flies under the radar; i highly recommend it.

  • @widgren87
    @widgren87 Год назад +1

    I will be honest and say that I only watched this because I saw Michael Halsey's Israel Hands in the thumbnail and I was smiling when I saw the clip :-)

    • @GoldandGunpowder
      @GoldandGunpowder  Год назад +1

      i use all manners of dirty trickz to lure you in

    • @widgren87
      @widgren87 Год назад +1

      @@GoldandGunpowder If it works, it works ;-)

  • @Kyoptic
    @Kyoptic Год назад

    How is this channel not so much bigger!?

  • @luiscastro2918
    @luiscastro2918 Год назад

    A very interesting video, it is always good to know how things were done in other countries. I have only read Spanish manuals from the 16th and 17th century. In them, compensating for the dispart was called "matar el vivo", and it was calculated in the same way, but instead of putting the stick in the muzzle ring, a wedge was made of that thickness, and after aiming the cannon, it was placed between the gun carriage and the base ring to compensate.
    Also, apart from the quadrant, you could use the gunners level (if you are American, you can find a very nice replica made by Franklin Mint) that allowed to also find the "jewels" (which are the center of the cannon's barrel I don't know the proper english term).

  • @billwaterson9492
    @billwaterson9492 Год назад

    Pirates? Are you kidding me? Subbed!

  • @SeaDog337
    @SeaDog337 11 месяцев назад +2

    Early naval gunnery is pretty interesting, but I think I'll be sticking with ye olde fire control radar :P

  • @erict3728
    @erict3728 Год назад

    Impressed. Nice work

  • @unknowntrooper_2791
    @unknowntrooper_2791 Год назад +1

    Wonderful video once more! I like these detailed looks into period technology and innovations. Cheers! 🏴‍☠

  • @Ironbattlemace
    @Ironbattlemace Год назад

    Thanks mate. Coast of Somalia will never be the same when we get through the Suez.

  • @andybreadley429
    @andybreadley429 Год назад

    Now that's what I've been wondering about. Thanks a lot.

  • @Ancientcaptain
    @Ancientcaptain Год назад +1

    Excellent video, thanks for taking the effort I really enjoyed it

  • @MrNick-og4qm
    @MrNick-og4qm Год назад

    Video: “ then You’ll know you have to stare down the barrel….”
    Me: OF A FOURTY-FIVE!!

  • @AmanoJack
    @AmanoJack Год назад

    It's fascinating to realize that modern battle computers do exactly the same things.

  • @1988dgs
    @1988dgs Год назад

    Don’t forget this heralds from a time when archery was still recent memory, having played some archery games at the club, aim, trajectory, arrow drop and windage were very well known so would have easily transposed to modern weapons.

  • @johnbattista9519
    @johnbattista9519 Год назад

    Excellent video

  • @Geliott
    @Geliott Год назад

    Already launching my DeLorean to become most experienced and expensive cannoneer in Caribbean!

  • @sushimuncher282
    @sushimuncher282 Год назад

    Me: I got work in two hours, I need sleep fast.
    Also me: Well, you never know when you might need to aim and fire a cannon on your way to work!

  • @galacticnightmare
    @galacticnightmare 6 месяцев назад

    also heisenberg with the pi tattoo goes hard

  • @i3olverkr622
    @i3olverkr622 Год назад +1

    "Jesse, we need to plunder"

  • @AlexanderosD
    @AlexanderosD Год назад

    'Fire the cannoooons!!!
    .....and don't forget to show your work....."

  • @alexrexaros9837
    @alexrexaros9837 Год назад +2

    If my math teacher told me pirates uses math to shoot a cannon, I would've been more invested in his classes.

  • @PotatoeJoe69
    @PotatoeJoe69 7 месяцев назад +1

    Consider the fact that the ocean isn't flat. Even on a calm day, the ship will be moving and rolling on 4 axis!

  • @johnnystankiewicz295
    @johnnystankiewicz295 Год назад +1

    cool pirate math

  • @MrMacavity
    @MrMacavity Год назад +2

    One thing that some people seem to overlook: the ocean moves, it is not a stable ground.

  • @TiocfaidhArLa34
    @TiocfaidhArLa34 Год назад

    if you could forge a rifled cannon with a slot on the side at the breach end for permanently affixing a gunners quadrant you would not have to stick it down the bore. in addition you could serrate the other side of the breach to use a rack and pinion system for elevating the gun with a crank on the gear that has holes flush with the carriage and tuned to the quadrant for inserting a locking dowel once you get the desired angle. designing a two piece carriage with an upper and a lower would let you place the lower carriage wheels into channels dug into the ships deck. on the lower carriage you would have a flat top with a serrated rack in the center. the bottom surface of the upper carriage would have a gear that engages with the rack allowing for windage adjustment. the gun would be prohibitively expensive but very accurate for a ship gun.

  • @ravenb3048
    @ravenb3048 Год назад +2

    This will help me with the complicated maths of trying to figure out a way to do cannons in games, thanks!

    • @CosplayZine
      @CosplayZine Год назад +1

      I am also working on a game of this type. I don't think complex math is required for a game though. Just a simulation like a loosely based system that roughly accounts for different aspects of combat. Do you have anything created yet or any social media for your development?

    • @ravenb3048
      @ravenb3048 Год назад

      @@CosplayZine Right now it's just at the concept stage, but I'll send you a link when I get started.

  • @Chris-mt4yq
    @Chris-mt4yq Год назад

    The thumbnails are on point brother 😂

  • @jsthecanuck6804
    @jsthecanuck6804 Год назад

    “Arrgh landlubbers wanna be swashbucklers till they be realizin how ‘ard swashbuckling be” -Captain Lil beard

  • @IceBug1337
    @IceBug1337 Год назад +1

    1:40 every bullet from every gun starts dropping right at the moment it leaves the barrel

  • @cesaravegah3787
    @cesaravegah3787 Год назад

    Reminds me of how the use of an almost instantaneous firing mechanism copied from infantry guns replacing the lit of early cannons gave the brithish sailors massive precision advantage over the spaniards just because it made it easier to compensate for the ship movement.

  • @griffithguns1776
    @griffithguns1776 Год назад

    Awesome video, ive wondered about this many times

  • @tac-cobserver3788
    @tac-cobserver3788 Год назад

    Yoho... Awesome 🤙
    Thanks for sharing
    Well, stay healthy for all of us & Safety First! ARrrght 😉🤙

  • @antonisauren8998
    @antonisauren8998 Год назад

    Outside of the US, even if we can't easly own a gun, we still can go to range from street, rent AK and have some fun with just personal ID. It probably differs from country to country, but just them have to get all licences and takes resposibility for guests behavior. Cannons are a bit more complicated as nobody will allow you to load solid shot into historical piece for safety reasons, but you can get to fire blank form napoleonic 3pdr or something similarly small on reanaction events.

  • @seth468
    @seth468 Год назад

    Interesting that such mathematical methods existed in the age of sail. I imagine only an officer, or perhaps a gun captain with training, would be able to do any of this. The average sailor wouldn't be doing any gun math. If I had to guess (without looking it up, as a thought experiment), I'd say the captain would have an idea of what range they wanted to engage the enemy at, and given the glacial pace of sailing ships they would have had a lot of time--hours--to maneuver into position. While they are getting into position, an officer can take the expected engagement range and pass that along to the gun captains, telling them to aim the guns at such and such mark on the gunner's quadrant whenever the signal to fire is given.

  • @arco4936
    @arco4936 Год назад

    Not sure why i need to know how to aim a cannon at 2am but sure glad i know how to now 😅

  • @richardmiller1345
    @richardmiller1345 Год назад

    Love your stuff…We have one and are having a second railgun cast.

  • @lankey6969
    @lankey6969 Год назад

    Yeah that chemist sure is good at ballistic calculations

  • @hughgrection3052
    @hughgrection3052 Год назад +2

    I ran across something ya may find interesting. They're 4 sided daggers used by gunners. They have graduated markings and numbers on them. In theory it's for many uses. First to prick the powder charge. Then to possibly help aim the cannon. Plus it gave the gunner a way to also defende himself.
    They're called gunners stilletos, or gunners daggers. I'm sure a guy like you can tell ehat it actually does by the numbers on it and say how it was used exactly.
    In naval warfare in the WW2 era there was a neat way I found that teams of battleships would help each other aim better. They had large analog looking clocks on their towers. Many assumed they told the time. But the numerals was all crazy. Turns out it was for when each ship fired, they showed the guns evelevation and data. This way if one ship was lucky and got a hit on the enemy's ship or fortification on the shore, their buddy should should look immediately over at a glance and give commands to his gunners to adjust to the settings of the ship that just hit the target. This shaved tons of time off of each ship needing to dial it in on the mark. I think actually each ship aimed a good bit differently on purpose. Then they would again check to see who hit the closest, adjust, repeat, and be on target far faster.
    I always found that to be brilliant

  • @steveschmitt6933
    @steveschmitt6933 Год назад

    Good dimension graph

  • @abnerdoon4902
    @abnerdoon4902 Год назад

    I now imagine Captain Heisenberg rigging a swivel gun at the back of his rowboat to automatically fire, load itself and turn side to side.

  • @thecreweofthefancy
    @thecreweofthefancy Год назад +1

    .....we will literally be doing that as the video comes on. :P Weather permitting.

  • @d.b.1176
    @d.b.1176 Год назад

    Arrrrr, it’s drivin’ me nuts!!!

  • @Balrog4242
    @Balrog4242 Год назад

    This is why pirates love pool and bowling.