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THREE-INCH ORDNANCE RIFLE Made of wrought iron, the 3-inch Ordnance Rifle, also known as the Rodman, could throw a Hotchkiss or Schenkl projectile more than a mile. The Hotchkiss projectile consisted of two iron elements with a lead band between them. firing forced the two iron pieces together and spread out the lead to take the rifling. The Schenkl projectile used a papier-mache sabot that slid up an expanding shank with the force of the charge and so took the rifiling. Artillery, like the Ordnance Rifle, was seldom employed against Indians. |
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Hotchkiss shell, the iron elements (left),
the complete projectile with lead expansion ring (right) |
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Schenkl shell, the iron part (left), the
complete projectile with papier-mache sabot (right) |
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