Weaponary Leonardos Steam Cannon Merged
Transcription
Weaponary Leonardos Steam Cannon Merged
WERPOilRY Leonardo da Vinci'S steam cannon foreshadowed the steam engines of the lndustrial Revolution. By Nick D'Alto "WHEN THE WATER HITS the heated part of the machine," the barely legible handwriting informs us, "it will be turned into so much steam that it will seem fantastic. This weapon has driven a cannonball weighing one talent [60 pounds] a distance of over 6 stadia labout two-thirds of a mile]." Beneath these scribblings in a notebook of Leonardo da Vinci's there is a sketch, apparently rendered in haste, of the Architronito, a cannon operated by the expansive power of steam. The genesis of this unusual weapon and the social and political climate that fostered it reveal much about the changing nature of warfare during the Italian Renaissance. Although best remembered today as the painter of such masterpieces as the Morn Lba and Thc last Supper, the multitalented Florentine Leonardo da Vinci (1452-1519) actually spent most of his career as a consulting military engineer. It was a profession in high demand among the warring city-states of late lSth-century Italy. During those unsettled times, the Kingdom of Naples, the Republic of Siena, the Dukedom of Milan, and Florence under the Medicis found themselves in intermittent mutual conflict. Papal armies threatened as well, while French, German and Spanish soldiers invaded and fought each other on Italian soil. This was the volatile world of Niccold Machiavelli, who as Florentine ministerof war counseled the princes of Italy and between the ancient and the new. His alliances and cruel politics of the age. ballista and catapult reach back to Roman archetypes,laid down inthe mili- Paradoxically, a tyrant of that day might conquer a crty by force of arms onlyto rule as its leading patron of arts tary treatises of Pliny and Vitruvius. The most interesting weapons in the notebooks, howeve4 incorporate futuristic fea- catapult combined. By that same irony, the skills for casting bronze statuary for a public square served equally well to forge cannons. Da battle s 3 Vinci, the intellectu- 18 MILTTARY HISTORY MARCH/APRIL 2()O5 Leonardo's drawings testify that late navigating the swirling Pax Romana with Mona .Lisa and the Archimedes, around 1500. Leonardo's now-famous notebooks. in the delicate art of and letters-a sort of A page from Leonardo da Vinci's notebook reveals detailed notes and diagrams for an Architronin, a deadly steam cannon named for strategy. The change is evidenced in Sth-century battle technolory still occupied a kind of transitional state, halfway otherEuropean states E and the weaponeer and give rise to the period's leading technology specialist, the consulting military engineer. Though privately he decried war as "a bestial madness," da Vinci would play a supporting role in combat formost of his career. Men such as Leonardo were indispensable to Renaissance-era rulers. Like the quantum leaps brought on by movable type and transoceanic exploration, 15thcenturywarfare was beginningto shed its medieval trappings for a more dynamic future. As the old dependence on ballistic siege engines, such as the trebuchet and catapult, gave way to the increasing mobility and superior destructive power of cannons and mortars, the new technolory demanded new strategies in siegecraft, defense, battlefield tactics and general ullv versatile "Renaissance man" of lore, would eventually meld the talents of the artist 1 tures. Astonishingly, Leonardo's cannons were breechloading, apparently the first of their kind. His projectiles were aerody- namically streamlined to extend their range, and guided to their target by a sophisticated empennage of crossed tail fins. His incendiary bombs were designed to explode with lethal (and essentiallymodern) shrapnel on impact. His small arms were fired by the first flintlocks ever devised. All those innovations were conceived centuries before they became commonplace. Equally remarkable, for the fust time Leonardo's stunning use of perspective created lifelike renderings of complex weapon systems, sufficiently accurate to conceptualize the devices and predict their performance entirely on paper, a kind of l5th-century computer-aided design. We meet soldiers manning a great crossbow maneuvered on six canted wheels. Its 135-foot-span bow is built up from laminated sections, flexed by an arm-thick bowstring drawn to the firing detent by capstans and worm gears. In another plan, the weight of 20 soldiers works an immense treadwheel that revolves stockbows automatically before a sharpshooter seated within. Leonardo calculated that 30,000 pounds of thrust wouldpropel each arrowto its target. And a leviathan dredging machine evinces an audacious batde plan, diverting the Arno River in a diabolical attempt to rob besieged Pisa of its supply line to the sea' Leonardo's foresight is nowhere more evident than in his revision of cannon technolory. For the previous cenhrry, most cannons were cast from cuprum (bronze), but with the primitive boring methods used in the mid-l5th century, the hammered stone projectiles typically fired by these pieces fitted only loosd down the bore, greatly diminishing their range and power. Worknen often built up larger field pieces from wrought iron bars, welded edgewise and then stayed, barrel-like, by iron hoops. Whether the resulting bore would even approach true, given so many separate parts, seems far from certain. Leonardo's improvements to cannon design were many: breectrloading, often through a screw-threaded breechblock; improved casting techniques to achieve a tighter-fitting sho! water jackets' an astonishingly modern cooling technique to allow guns to be fired more frequently; and even the first cartridge, with cast iron ball, powder charge and an ignition primer packaged in a single shell for rapid loading. DaVinci also designed anamazing variety of light cannons, sometimes employrng multiple barrels in revolving rapid-firing designs that admirably prel saged the cart-mounted Gatling guns of the l9th-century U.S. ArmY. In all such plans, Leonardo exhibits the Renaissance spirit of experiment, often annotating the results of his experiments or the design of test jigs to prove a construction principle. For example, standard artillery texts in leonardos day (and even to the 17th century) offered inaccurate il- lustrations of projectile flight, depicting an initial diagonal rise, then turning sharply to complete a nearly vertical fall. By observing a propelled perforated leather bag spouting jets of water, Leonardo revealed the tme parabolic tra- depicted in its firing position via a cutaway section of the barrel. Clearly, the scene is preparatory to firing, as smoke jectory of missiles, as well as the relations of force, angle and carry-in effect deducing the first accurate telemetry. Equally impressive are Leonardo's machine tools for fashioning his improved cannons, which were often highly automated and designed to execute multiple manufacturing steps through intricate airangements of dependent gears and linkages. In one scheme, a turbine similar to a Pelton water wheel energizes a series of helicoidal gears and meshing worrns to draw bronze blanks into and flames are shourn already rising through the brazier lid. Beneath Leonardo's terse explanation of the device is the final drawing, rendered only schematically, showing the completed weapon. Da Vinci evidently envisioned the Architronito as a field piece; it is mounted on a traction-wheel gun carriage, with a skid leg to stand against recoil. An additional support extends from the muzzle end as a kind of tapering metal staves, which become edge-welded foundation block, apparently to stabilize the muzde during firing. Da Vinci's notations of shot and range, as well as his description of the terrific din during firing, suggest that a prototype of his steam cannon was actually built and tested in his day-a testament to the zeal with which new forms of weaponry were actively pursued during this era of both desperation and growth. Howeve[ to create an elegantly strong cannon barrel of true bore. His famous rendering of a cannon foundry courtyard depicts the leviathan scale of his new weapoffy, including a platoon of men hoisting a cannon barrel the diameter of a man to its gun carriage on a stiffJegged derrick. The finishing touch was the master's new design for fortifications: not the hightowered fairytale castles designed to with- whether operation of the Architronito ever extended to actual field use by the armies of Sforza, Borgiaoranotherof the military leaders da Vinci senred during his long careeris a chapterunfortunately stand catapults, but a low rounded citadel evolved specifically for the new age of gunpowder. A quick sketch depicts one of Leonardo's bombards positioned at the parapet wall, among the earliest known proposals for mounting cannons lost to history. The source of Leonardo's inspiration for the device remains somewhat hazy' He certainly would have winressed the furious boiling of water that occurred while quenching gun banels during boring. But *hil" it is obuious thatgunbarrelsbecome hot during formation and during fuing, the willful heating as a means to expand a working fluid (steam) as the firing agent represents genuine innovation; of all the Renaissance engineers, no one except Leonardo seems to have considered it. Tiaken in a larger sense, this l5th-centuryweapon represents more than simply a new way to fire a gun. In hindsight, we within the castle itself. Leonardo applied much of that same insight in the development of his steam cannon. Probably sketched about 1500, da Vinci's drawings indicate a narrow cast-bronze gun barrel. The bore is very long, probably to improve firing accuracy in the days before rifling. Modern analysis places it at about 7.25 inches in diameter. In place of a breech section, a coal- fired brazier surrounds that end of the barrel to heat the bronze itself to a very high temperature. A set of injectors then sprays a small quantity of water into the barrel, just behind the shell. According to da Vinci's notes, the resulting expansion of superheated steam would propel the shot with terrific force' The weapon's name, Architronito (apparently a nod to Archimedes), seems to have been Leo- can see that Leonardo's piston, cylinder and injector arrangement, albeit in a ' ' more destructive mode, foreshadowed the modern steam engine, a device that wouldenergizethelndustrialRevolution nardo's invention as well. centuries later, Da Vinci developed the weaPon in three drawings on a single notebook sheet, with two additional constmction details provided. The first drawing tilts Vinci's rapid sketch, Union forces during the American Civil War employed steamfired ligtrt carurons of remarkably similar the device toward the viewer to reveal the workings of the brazier door. The center illustration delineates the operation of a square-section hydraulic screw press that drives the pressurized water through the injectors. A detail of the press plunger is provided. Additionally, the cannonbali is More than three centuries after da in successful assaults against Confederate batteries. More recently, the Holman Projectors of World War tr also tapped the expansive power configuration of steam to fire hand grenades at aircraft, the surprising offspring of this Renaissancegenius. illH