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Historic Guns of British India

3 bytes removed, 17:29, 20 December 2011
The Pair of Guns at the Entrance: amend image size
from 'MANDALAY' by Rudyard Kipling<br />
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File:0053-mandalay-palace-entrance-1.jpeg|Palace entrance gun 1
File:0057-mandalay-palace-entrance-2.jpeg|Palace entrance gun 2
These two guns are similar, but cast by different foundries. They are Royal Navy cast iron smooth bore muzzle-loading cannon, as are the other pair, and they bear the Crown and 'P' signifying they have passed proof, that is to say test fired, and they are stamped with the Royal Cipher of George ll (reigned 1727-1760). One gun has a weight of 57cwt 0qrs 8lbs (cwt = hundred weight = 112lbs; qrs = quarter = 28lbs). The other gun would seem to be of very similar weight. Both are 32-pounder demi-cannon of nine and a half feet.<br />
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File:0054-mandalay-palace-entrance-1-detail 1.jpeg|Palace entrance gun 1 detail 1
File:0055-mandalay-palace-entrance-1-detail 2.jpg|Palace entrance gun 1 detail 2
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The cannon at Entrance Palace entrance gun 1, marked W on the trunnion (the trunnions are short iron protuberances which balance the cannon on the gun carriage enabling it to be tilted upwards as necessary) was cast at the Waldron foundry near Heathfield in Sussex, at the time of John Harrison, Ironmaster.
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File:0058-mandalay-Fuller-initials.jpeg|Palace entrance gun 2 detail 1
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