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  2. Gun carriage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gun_carriage

    A gun carriage is a frame or a mount that supports the gun barrel of an artillery piece, allowing it to be maneuvered and fired. These platforms often had wheels so that the artillery pieces could be moved more easily. [1] Gun carriages are also used on ships to facilitate the movement and aiming of large cannons and guns. [2]

  3. Jaivana Cannon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jaivana_Cannon

    The carriage is equipped with two removable additional wheels for transport. The removable wheels are 2.74 m (9.0 ft) in diameter. It is mounted on wheels and has the mechanism of two back wheels mounted on roller pin bearings, to turn it 360° and fire in any direction. A tin shed was built to protect the cannon against weather.

  4. 14-inch/50-caliber railway gun - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/14-inch/50-caliber_railway_gun

    "Battleships on Wheels" Popular Science Monthly, January 1928, pp. 16–18, 123–125, author was the US Navy admiral in charge of World War I 14-inch naval railroad cannon program. Record and Log of U.S. Naval Railway Battery 5, 1918, MS 524 held by Special Collections & Archives, Nimitz Library at the United States Naval Academy

  5. Artillery wheel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Artillery_wheel

    Walter Hancock's wedge wheel (artillery wheel) diagram, 1834. The artillery wheel was a nineteenth-century and early-twentieth-century style of wagon, gun carriage, and automobile wheel. Rather than having its spokes mortised into a wooden nave (hub), it has them fitted together in a keystone fashion with miter joints, bolted into a two-piece ...

  6. Field artillery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Field_artillery

    The text describes a Chinese cannon called a "thousand ball thunder cannon", manufactured of bronze and fastened with wheels. [2] The book also describes another mobile form of artillery called a "barbarian attacking cannon" consisting of a cannon attached to a two-wheel carriage. [5]

  7. Traveling forge - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Traveling_Forge

    An American Civil War-era traveling forge contained 1,200 pounds (540 kg) of tools, coal and supplies. These tools and supplies included a bellows attached to a fireplace, a 4-inch-wide (100 mm) vise, 100-pound (45 kg) anvil, a box containing 250 pounds (110 kg) of coal, 200 pounds (91 kg) of horse shoes, 4-foot-long (1.2 m) bundled bars of iron, and on the limber was a box containing the ...