I have a .46 caliber smoothbore barrel that bears Belgian proof marks from the 1890s. It is, however, unused. The iron from which the barrel is made is quite soft. It is octagon in the rear, tapering to round toward the muzzle. It is probably an idea of questionable merit, but I am making a gun out of it. the barrel is inlet in the blank, but the hooked tang is not yet installed. I think I will place the unshaped butt in a tire, as Turner Kirkland showed me in the '60s and fire it with a long piece of firecracker fuse stuck in the nipple. I have in mind, 100 grains of 3 f powder and one patched ball. I think this barrel came over in the 60s with the 12 tons of old gun parts Turner bought in Europe. It is not my desire to blow it up, but to prove it safe for a sane load. What think you?