Here are some images of Edu Toys Leonardo Da Vinci's Ship's Cannon With Shield.
From the Instructions "
Leonardo da Vinci was also a military engineer; he studied weapons and 
medieval military techniques at length. A large part of his manuscripts 
show machines and military architecture, some are copies of machines by 
Taccola Francesco di Giorgio, others are his own inventions or 
modifications of existing machines. He also spent a lot of time working 
on naval battles, designing dozens of ships with as many attacking 
methods as means of defense on the sea. One of the most original 
projects is that of the ship with shield and cannon. Da Vinci drew this 
naval weapon in manuscript B for the first time, almost certainly 
copying it from a previous author, because the drawing of this project 
was already presented in the treatises of engineers who came before da 
Vinci and to whom he referred when studying. Again, it was a general 
idea, only roughly drawn and without any technical details. Da Vinci 
subsequently revisited the project; he reconsidered it, improved it and 
redrew it clearly and in its entirety on folio 172r of the Codex 
Atlanticus. The idea was to use a small, agile vessel equipped with a 
cannon. The prow of the ship and the cannon are protected by a wooden 
shield. Da Vinci studied this subject closely, identified the weak 
points and invented his own version with many more functions. He 
transformed the almost "fantastic" medieval drawing into a truly 
achievable engineering project. First, he concentrated on the structure 
of the vessel which needed to be reinforced and keep the cannon firmly 
in the middle. The shield, which previous engineers had shown as being 
immobile and almost temporary, in da Vinci's drawing was split in two 
and became part of the structure and mobile. A system of ropes and 
pulleys keeps the shields raised to protect the ship. Once the winches 
are locked, the weight of the shields themselves causes them to rotate 
outwards to uncover the cannon which can then fire. The shield rotate on
 two non-parallel axes and da Vinci designed a geometric shape of them 
so that when lowered, they fit around the curve of the ship. The 
resulting contact between hull and shield is not an easy line to 
calculate and da Vinci proposed a few variations. Firing the cannon is 
another problem to deal with, as this causes a recoil powerful enough to
 push the ship backwards. The semi-submerged shields themselves act as 
breaks, keeping the ship steady as it fires. Da Vinci's drawing on folio
 172r even shows the metal covered prow of the ship with a detail 
showing the device that attaches the shield hinges. The metal covered 
prow is there to deliver the first blow to the enemy and is therefore a 
secondary weapon. The shields are not just to protect the prow, but also
 to hide the main weapon: the cannon. The ship could therefore approach 
the enemy quickly, and its tapered and futuristic shape made it also 
rather menacing. It was protected by a shield which made the cannon 
invisible and meant that enemy weapons would be ineffective work. The 
angle of the shield was also useful to deflect cannon fire. When rammed 
quickly into the enemy, it could create the first serious damage thanks 
to its metal covered prow. Once the enemy ship was "hooked' and 
presumably a breach had been created in the hull, it was the moment to 
unveil the secret weapon. The shields having been quickly lowered thanks
 to their own weight, the cannon was ready to fire directly into the 
enemy ship. In theory, a small vessel such as this could therefore sink a
 large galleon. It is not known whether a ship like this was ever built.
 There are no records of it and perhaps this project too remained 
amongst the many projects that Leonardo da Vinci never carried out.   






2 comments:
Built into s nice looking model.
Thanks! I don't think it was ever built in real life. Only on paper.
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