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Damascus barrel
Now it makes sense...an accident waiting to happen...
Damascus barrel
agreedcolorado clyde said:Damascus barrel
Now it makes sense...an accident waiting to happen...
Gentlemen I totally disagree good Damascus barrels are safe ,it is when people do stupid things that makes them unsafe like heavy charging them , using plastic wads . Has I said previous guns that go through the proof house are safe ,I have shot Damascus barrel guns for the past 68 years from flintlocks to breech loaders in all bore sizes with out a mishap , give me an original with Damascus barrels before any repro.Cynthialee said:agreedcolorado clyde said:Damascus barrel
Now it makes sense...an accident waiting to happen...
after reading about numerous Damascus barrel failures you couldn't get me to shoot one that is old
Ah, but here over the pond, we don't have proof houses to sooth our nerves. :grin:Feltwad said:Has I said previous guns that go through the proof house are safe...
Cynthialee said:A new Damascus barrel I wouldn't have an issue shooting, especially one that has been properly proofed in a proof house. But if it is old, and/or hasn't been verifiably proofed, then I don't think it is wise to shoot them.
I have read too many times about these guns having critical failures.
Damascus is beautiful, but beauty is not enough.
I certainly wouldn't own one.
Has I said original Damascus barrels are safe it is how we use them ,if it is a inferior barrel then the proof house will find its fault .Erzulis boat said:Cynthialee said:A new Damascus barrel I wouldn't have an issue shooting, especially one that has been properly proofed in a proof house. But if it is old, and/or hasn't been verifiably proofed, then I don't think it is wise to shoot them.
I have read too many times about these guns having critical failures.
Damascus is beautiful, but beauty is not enough.
I certainly wouldn't own one.
I agree.
Feltwad said:Has I said original Damascus barrels are safe it is how we use them ,if it is a inferior barrel then the proof house will find its fault .
At that period of the muzzle loader and breech loader English barrel makers and gun makers are and even today the best in the world not like the repro you see on the market today .
Feltwad
The chap in question I can assure was using a home made ramrod which he had used for many years with the gun , The over shot wads for which he had run out off and got some from another shooter were too thin they were less than a 1/16 .Heelerau said:Feltwad I have been cogitating over your mates fowler, I wonder if he used the small end of the ramrod instead of the flared end, likely distracted at the time. It is the only way I can think of as the correct end of the ram rod is near to bore size, or quite large and I cannot see how the wad could have there fore turned sideways on the way down to the shot charge. As to dieseling, I use windex to wipe my .451 bore after the charge and over powder wads have been seated so I don't wet that pain in the a'''s patent breech. The chap mentioned was using a volatile type solvent. I then wipe out with a dry patch. Hopefully it is a volatile type solvent that is the trouble and not just the passage of air being displaced via the cone. I suspect the former as I have not heard of a gun going off when being loaded with projectile. It is disturbing all the same.
My question as well. Also, why is the bore so clean, without any powder fouling?colorado clyde said:Why does that musket have a seam running down the barrel?.....and it looks mighty thin...
bull3540 said:My question as well. Also, why is the bore so clean, without any powder fouling?colorado clyde said:Why does that musket have a seam running down the barrel?.....and it looks mighty thin...
Please forgive my ignorance but this sighting flat; how is that attached to the barrel? Or is the barrel itself flattened on the top? Could the sighting flat and how it is attached/part of the barrel be the cause of a weak spot?Forrest said:bull3540 said:My question as well. Also, why is the bore so clean, without any powder fouling?colorado clyde said:Why does that musket have a seam running down the barrel?.....and it looks mighty thin...
It's not actually a seam, it's a raised sighting flat that runs the length of the barrel. Not that uncommon for sporting guns of that vintage.
As to whether or not that barrel is too thin, one of the first things that needs to be done is have an accurate wall thickness measurement taken. .025 to .030 wall thickness is plenty in that region of the barrel. However, if the burst was caused by an obstruction, which it was by looks of the failure, a modern "nitro" barrel probably wouldn't have held up either.
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