Gun Wad

Description
Bundled mass of rope fibre, yellow brown colour. Shape is approximately pentagonal – one side is quite flat – other is domed. Bundle of rope twisted and coiled into dense mass – coiled knot/mass on domed surface that might represent end tie off.

A gun wad. When loading the gun, it was essential that both cartridge and projectile were retained in place. The gun wads performed this and other necessary functions. The wad between the powder cartridge and the cannon ball was to momentarily absorb the pressure build up from rapidly burning black powder, thereby increasing the cannon ball’s velocity. The second was simply there to keep the cannon ball in place. The wad is composed of recycled rope fibres. Wads were usually made up on board the ship and the gunner was issued with pieces of old rope and cable, known as junk, for this purpose. HMS Invincible, a 74-gun ship, would have been issued with five tins of junk.
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Object Detail


Catalogue Number
INV.498
Classification
Collection
Measurement Display
Length: 170mm
Width: 160mm
Depth: 80mm (3 1/8")
Primary Prod Date
Primary Prod Period

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