The arte of gunnerie. Wherein is set foorth a number of seruiceable secrets, and practical conclusions, belonging to the art of gunnerie, by arithmeticke skill to be accomplished: both pretie, pleasant, and profitable for all such as are professors of the same facultie. / Compiled by Thomas Smith of Barwicke vpon Tweed souldier.
About this Item
Title
The arte of gunnerie. Wherein is set foorth a number of seruiceable secrets, and practical conclusions, belonging to the art of gunnerie, by arithmeticke skill to be accomplished: both pretie, pleasant, and profitable for all such as are professors of the same facultie. / Compiled by Thomas Smith of Barwicke vpon Tweed souldier.
Author
Smith, Thomas, fl. 1600-1627.
Publication
London :: Printed [by Richard Field] for VVilliam Ponsonby,
1600 [-1601].
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Subject terms
Gunnery -- Early works to 1800.
Artillery -- Early works to 1800.
Ordnance -- Early works to 1800.
Military fireworks -- Early works to 1800.
Link to this Item
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A12531.0001.001
Cite this Item
"The arte of gunnerie. Wherein is set foorth a number of seruiceable secrets, and practical conclusions, belonging to the art of gunnerie, by arithmeticke skill to be accomplished: both pretie, pleasant, and profitable for all such as are professors of the same facultie. / Compiled by Thomas Smith of Barwicke vpon Tweed souldier." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A12531.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed May 27, 2025.
Pages
To know how much one coyler rope, for the draught of
any peece of Ordinance is bigger then another,
and how thicke any of them is.
Take the compasse of the lesser, and likewise the cir∣cumference
of the greater, abating the lesser out of the
greater, the remaine is your desire, which knowne by the
rule of proportion you may find out the height or thick∣nesse
of the lesser.
Example.
Suppose you haue a coyler rope of 6 inches compasse,
and another of 4 inches compasse, abating 4 inches from
6 inches the compasse of the greater, rests 2 inches, the
diameter or height of the greater: which knowne, frame
the rule of proportion saying: If 6 yeeld 2, what 4? the
quotient is one inch ⅔ parts, shewing the true thicknesse
or height of the lesser.
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