A Short Account of an Improved Cannon and its machinery unlocks a window into early gun design and the science of impact, explained in practical terms for readers curious about engineering history.
This edition gathers the author’s arguments, experiments, and notes on how a cannon could be built stronger, cheaper, and more reliably. It blends technical reasoning with historical context, including debates over patents and equal emphasis on theory and practice.
- Explore how mass, velocity, and inertia determine the force in collisions and hammering.
- See simple demonstrations of how force distributes between objects of different weights.
- Understand the practical details of cannon construction, such as using hoops and layered materials.
- Get a sense of the 19th‑century patent and institutional dynamics shaping military innovation.
Ideal for readers of history of science and technology, or anyone curious about the engineering mindset behind early firearms.