Got to say You need bigger balls
No crescent type shavings full ring will seal.
No crescent type shavings full ring will seal.
Those fire sticks are essentially small Diesel engines. Compress air fast enough and you produce heat. Friction is not at play here. Besides, when the ball moves forward it is decompressing the chamber and contents which causes adiabatic cooling. (At a very small level in this case.)Some good points. Thanks for the video. There is definitely a time lapse between the main chamber going off and then the chamber to the left. From watching it, it doesn't seem that loose or poorly fitted caps would be the problem. The idea that reloading with a lot of grease and residue on the end of the cylinder and grains of powder sticking to it- if that is what is being said- that could well cause trouble. It still seems that maybe the ball moved from recoil but if it moved enough to cause an open passage is uncertain. One last idea. The South Sea Islands have a fire starter, a stick fitted into bamboo with tinder/char in the bottom. You give one quick hit and the friction creates an ember. Could a ball move enough to cause enough friction to create an ember? Doesn't seem possible.
People fired their guns less?
Besides personal defense, gun fights and combat, most users of percussion revolvers didn't fire their guns.
This just about sums it it.
Although they were THE hand-held firearm of the day, there is little to zero mention of organised shooting competitions using handguns. Rifles, OTOH, have ALWAYS attracted competition viz. the Coors and other schuetzen matches.
I never even thought of that aspect
There are volumes of writings about muzzleloading rifle match shooting, Col Hiram Berdan has written books, I have books about Civil War "Snipers" and how many of them were avid match shooters before the war , and they go into great detail about shooting their rifles.
But the fact that revolvers were defensive weapons, military sidearms and basically were just really nice looking tools, with there being no organized target use of them. Is probably a big factor as to the lack of any in-depth info on chain fires
We have to remember that the resurgence of percussion revolver shooting was mainly due to Spaghetti Westerns , and the Italian gun makers seeing a chance for profit . Plus most countries have relaxed laws for muzzleloaders so people could enjoy shooting percussions in countries where it was harder to obtain a cartridge gun
Even in the US the novelty of picking up a cap and baller at a sporting goods store over the counter means half the people I know own one
So, there are ironically most likely 10x as many percussion revolvers in use now than their was when they were made originally. Magnifying the "flaw" of chain fires. People are like? What's the fix for chain fires? A Cartridge revolver.
Just like I tell my gun friends who wonder why I "bother to mess with " stuff like muskets and cap and ballers. I'm like, it's a hobby and I enjoy it, but you can easily see why every developed nation's military went to breech loaders and cartridge revolvers as soon as they possibly could. There is no "fix" for the quirks of these weapons besides the inevitable evolution past them.
Unless I am mistaken the nipples on pepper boxes didn't have recessed nipples surrounded by metal to shield them from flash. Legend has it Sam Colt didn't have them on his first prototype and it exploded. YMMVThere will probably always be a gray area. Gun guru Elmer Keith felt most chain fires were to ill fitting caps. Mark Twain, in his book "Roughing It" said he had a pepper box (probably 4 barrels, and when he fired the thing all four barrels went off at the same time. How do you explain that? 4 ill fitting caps? four barrels without lube, etc. at the chamber ends?
I replaced the nipples on my 3 BP guns with Track of the Wolf and Slix Shot nipples. Both seat the #11 and 1075 caps very well when pushed on with a seating stick or whatever you want to use.Has anyone used the nipples sized for #11 caps on their revolvers? I can find 11’s the 10’s not common around me.
I doubt that’s accurate at all. Years ago now Lyman tested open top revolvers and the most pressure they ever developed was in the neighborhood of 9000 lead units of pressure. Far less than 20,000 psi.I was amazed to hear , I’m not sure how accurate this is, from Blackie Thomas on YouTube that percussion revolvers develop about 20K psi for an instant in the chamber.
He added that if the nipple hole gets much larger than a paper clip it needs replacing . I have quite a variety of sizes from a Sharps musket cap to stock Uberti , Pietta revolvers to a target Pedersoli Remington , shotgun , Slixshot & Treso but it did make me think about keeping a better eye on the openings.
I couldn’t fit a pick down the nipples that came with the Pedersoli Remington at first but they’ve opened up more now.
Far less than 20,000 psi.
That pressure is very high...Years ago now Lyman tested open top revolvers and the most pressure they ever developed was in the neighborhood of 9000 lead units of pressure. Far less than 20,000 psi.
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