During American Civil War artillery ammunition, despite improvement in fuses, was still very Napoleonic. The guns mostly fired either solid shot or time-fused explosive shell (with or without lead balls within). There were contact fused explosive shells, at least for the rifled artillery, but they were not very effective beyond use for ranging shots. By Franco-Prussian War the Prussians were using breech-loaded rifled artillery (Krupp C/64 and C/67) and were now supposedly using contact fused shells to great effect.
What made these shells effective over the slightly earlier rounds used in ACW? Presumably they still had the same problem of tending to get buried in the ground and the filler was still the same low-explosive black powder?
What made these shells effective over the slightly earlier rounds used in ACW? Presumably they still had the same problem of tending to get buried in the ground and the filler was still the same low-explosive black powder?
Last edited: