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They are usually made from copper, gilding metal and sometimes sintered iron. The modern day has intruded here also and they will now be encountered in plastic versions. Their use and introduction can be traced back to the time when cylindrical projectiles first appeared. The original round cannonball because of its requirement to be loaded from the muzzle had no method of sealing the bore. In fact had the ball been tight enough to seal the bore you wouldn't have been able to load the weapon at all. All this changed when the Cylindro-ogival projectile arrived on the scene along with the not-new breech loading weapons. (They had been tried many years before but failed through the inability of the gunners to adequately seal the breeches). A round cannonball needs no stabilizing. Because of its spherical shape it is inherently stable. Ask any cricketer, golfer or baseballer. On the other hand the Cylindro-ogival projectile is inherently unstable. It will not fly very well at all unless it is stabilized in some way. The two basic methods of stabilizing an elongated projectile are:
To provide adequate stability for a projectile using fins there needs to be some sort of protection for the fins. The arrow of your ancient bowman would not survive in the bore of a cannon without some form of protection. In fact the Manuscript depicting the Vase Gun shows just this fact. The gun is shown firing what appears to be an arrow with its fins wrapped in some form of leather. The latest technique is to provide a discarding sabot which protects and carries the projectile up the bore and is then discarded at the muzzle. The drawbacks are obvious, they are expensive and more complicated to make. One great advantage is that the weapon can be made smooth bore as spin is not necessary. FIN STABILISATION.
Providing spin to a cylindrical projectile introduces gyroscopic forces which keep the projectile flying point first. To provide this spin you must arrange some form of rifling in the bore of the weapon and then devise some method of transfering the spin from the rifling to the projectile. This adds considerably to the cost and complexity of the weapon and requires some device on the projectile for accepting the forces applied to create the spin. I.e. a driving band. SPIN STABILISATION
Many steps were tried before the driving band of today was arrived at. The steps in roughly chronological order are: Twisted projectiles. Studded projectiles. Lead coated projectiles. Studded projectiles with gas checks. Gas checks with supporting and driving bands. Driving Bands.
TWISTED PROJECTILES
The two efforts at producing a smooth bored twisted projectile were by two different men. Mr. Josheph Whitworth and a Mr. Lancaster. They both came up with the idea to produce a projectile with several faces twisted along the length. The bore of the weapon was likewise twisted. The great problem arising from the use of these types of projectiles was the difference between a laboratory and the mass produced weapon at the front. In the laboratory where the conditions were pristine and each round was individually produced the system works well. At the front where the ammunition had been mass produced by unskilled labour and the weapon was also mass produced the tolerances were a little more generous giving rise to the projectiles jamming in the bore with distressing frequency.
An example of a Whitworth hexagonal shrapnel shell. Photo courtesy of the Artillery museum, Woolwich.
It occurred to inventive minds that providing studs on the outside of the projectile engaging in the grooves of the rifling would impart spin to the projectile as it passed through the bore. Tolerances being what they were in those days there was still a gas loss forward past the studs and the rifling.
An example of a studded projectile. Photo courtesy of the Artillery museum, Woowhich. An example of a ribbed projectile. Photo courtesy of the Artillery museum, Woolwich.
If you coated a projectile in a sheath of lead the whole thing would act as a complete seal for the bore. The drawback is that the quantity of lead being driven through the bore leaves large amounts of lead fouling behind. But is certainly sealed the bore and showed the way forward to the solution of the problem of obturation.
It is clearly evident from these designs that the designers had begun to get the hang of this obturation business. It needed just a little refining and they were there.
Driving bands
At last the solution is achieved, the humble driving band. A simple ring of soft metal press fitted to the body of a projectile that seals the bore, imparts spin and is relatively easy to provide.
An example of a double driving band. Photo courtesy of the Imperial War Museum, London.
An example of a single wide driving band. Photo courtesy of the Imperial War Museum, London.
The functions of a driving band are as follows: To prevent the escape of propellant gasses past the projectile. To transfer the twist of the rifling to the projectile as spin. To a lesser extent to retain the projectile in the bore when high angles of elevation are applied.