![]() |
Can anyone identify this device on this flintlock pistol???
Consider me baffled. My father just came across this flinklock pistol and no one seems to be able to tell him what the device is for. When the frizzen is closed and you push the button on top of the frizzen it allows a small plate to remain over the pan. When you re-close the frizzen it works like a normal frizzen where sparks get thrown in the pan the usual way. What could this device for? Is there anything else you can tell me about this flintlock? Here's some pictures to help with the identification. Thank you for your help gentlemen.
http://i83.photobucket.com/albums/j2...b/IMAG0517.jpg http://i83.photobucket.com/albums/j2...b/IMAG0513.jpg http://i83.photobucket.com/albums/j2...b/IMAG0514.jpg http://i83.photobucket.com/albums/j2...b/IMAG0516.jpg |
Re: Can anyone identify this device on this flintlock pistol???
are you talking about the flap unde rthe frizen that covers the pan?
|
Re: Can anyone identify this device on this flintlock pistol???
Quote:
|
Re: Can anyone identify this device on this flintlock pistol???
An attempt at keeping one's powder dry?
An early attempt at a safety? |
Re: Can anyone identify this device on this flintlock pistol???
the frizzen down will help keep the powder dry.. but maybee a safety?
guess it would do both really? |
Re: Can anyone identify this device on this flintlock pistol???
While unusual and complicated in it's workings, it just seems another way to cover the pan to keep the primer powder secure and dry while carrying the firearm. Firearm designers down through the ages were the Steve Jobs of ingenious devices, some practical, some really wild. your pictures, while very good, don't show any marking clear enough identify the possible maker or country of origin. What are the various markings.
|
Re: Can anyone identify this device on this flintlock pistol???
Interesting guys, Why would this system make a good safety? Sounds like this could be a rare find my Father made?
|
Re: Can anyone identify this device on this flintlock pistol???
I didn't say it was a good safety. It could be an attempt at keeping inadvertant spark from priming powder.
I also mentioned an attempt at keeping powder dry prior to mentioning a safety as dry powder was the first thing I considered. |
Re: Can anyone identify this device on this flintlock pistol???
maybe it's to allow one to move the frizzen forward and fully decock the hammer while not allowing the primer charge to spill out?
|
Re: Can anyone identify this device on this flintlock pistol???
Whatever its intent it didn't catch on. This could be for any one of, or a combination of, many possible reasons. The fact that it was not widely accepted does make it relatively rare in number. This rarity does not necessarily make it valuable although it may have some value to collectors.
I am not speaking as an expert but as a thinking person with experience in firearms. |
Re: Can anyone identify this device on this flintlock pistol???
Quote:
maybee this was the 1800's version of a delta force amphibous assault carbine.. :) pirate jumps out of the water pours the water out of his gun bbl, flips wish water 'resistant' pan cover out of the way and unleashes his massive single shot volley.. :) |
Re: Can anyone identify this device on this flintlock pistol???
Quote:
|
Re: Can anyone identify this device on this flintlock pistol???
Quote:
|
Re: Can anyone identify this device on this flintlock pistol???
it looked even better than it sounded as I played it out in my brain as I was typing it.. ;)
I used jack sparrow for the pirate :) he's odd enough to do something like that.. :) |
Re: Can anyone identify this device on this flintlock pistol???
Got me. If it is supposed to keep the pan dry, waterproof pans were in common use before that pistol was made. If it is supposed to keep the powder from falling out, the regular frizzen does that and has to be closed and the pan covered before the gun can be fired. Pan covers were common on matchlocks and snaphaunces but it doesn't make a lot of sense on a flintlock.
If it is a safety, it is a rather crude one and looks like it would be hard to move out of the way in a hurry. The normal sliding safety was more efficient and most were automatically kicked off when the cock was pulled back. That one would have the advantage of being installed with only a change to the frizzen, no alteration of the lock would be needed. Jim |
Re: Can anyone identify this device on this flintlock pistol???
i wonder if it could have been a matchlock conversion?
real stretch there I guess... |
Re: Can anyone identify this device on this flintlock pistol???
No indication that the gun was ever anything but a flintlock. I believe it is French.
Jim |
Re: Can anyone identify this device on this flintlock pistol???
I appreciate all the brainstorming guys. I'm stumped, my Father is stumped, and all his gun friends are stumped. It's like no one has seen this before. It's quite exciting but frustrating that we may never know who made the gun.
|
Re: Can anyone identify this device on this flintlock pistol???
FWIW, I think who made the gun and who put on that gadget may be two different people. The "thing" may well have been some inventor's idea and he just used that pistol as his "test bed." Are there any markings on the lockplate or on the barrel that could help identify the original maker or the country of origin?
Jim |
Re: Can anyone identify this device on this flintlock pistol???
Quote:
|
Re: Can anyone identify this device on this flintlock pistol???
Have to admit, it is interesting. There were a lot of interesting designs during that era, some caught on, such as percussion caps, others such as shooting square bullets at infidels didn't.:eek:
|
Re: Can anyone identify this device on this flintlock pistol???
Here's the skinny - as someone touched on above. It is to allow the pan to be primed while the frizzen is open and the hammer down. Most flint locks when primed and 'ready' must have the hammer at half cock to carry it safely. For long storage some people think that constant strain on springs is undesirable. So - this device allows the gun to be primed for quick use, with the hammer down, frizzen open and springs relaxed. It is a rare feature, second one I know of.
French, I agree. |
Re: Can anyone identify this device on this flintlock pistol???
I think rhmc24 has the answer.
Jim |
Re: Can anyone identify this device on this flintlock pistol???
Quote:
|
Re: Can anyone identify this device on this flintlock pistol???
As promised here is a picture of the proof mark.
http://i83.photobucket.com/albums/j2...b/IMAG0519.jpg A person on another forum thinks it's a gun cobbler together using very old parts. Most of which he thinks are Austrian in origin. |
| All times are GMT -5. The time now is 02:25 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.7
Copyright ©2000 - 2013, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.
Copyright ©2002 - 2013, TheFirearmsForum.Com