So I was thinking about smoothbores and why historically it seems they were typically loaded (as far as we know) bare ball with just wads rather than patched...
Could it be in part because so many of the early guns it seems were only equipped with plain wooden rods without provisions for a ball-puller? I'm just thinking...how would they have pulled a tightly patched round ball out of the bore (dry-balled or bad powder perhaps) with no puller or provisions? Whereas with a wadded ball, all they needed was a piece of wire and they could have just pulled the top wad out and plopped the ball out.
What would you do on the frontier if you dry-balled your patched round ball, or had to get it out for some reason and only had a plain wooden wiping stick with no fittings or ball puller? I think I would just stick to bare balls and wads for peace of mind.
Forgive me, I'm just a noob at this so maybe there are other traditional methods for unloading balls I don't know about.
Could it be in part because so many of the early guns it seems were only equipped with plain wooden rods without provisions for a ball-puller? I'm just thinking...how would they have pulled a tightly patched round ball out of the bore (dry-balled or bad powder perhaps) with no puller or provisions? Whereas with a wadded ball, all they needed was a piece of wire and they could have just pulled the top wad out and plopped the ball out.
What would you do on the frontier if you dry-balled your patched round ball, or had to get it out for some reason and only had a plain wooden wiping stick with no fittings or ball puller? I think I would just stick to bare balls and wads for peace of mind.
Forgive me, I'm just a noob at this so maybe there are other traditional methods for unloading balls I don't know about.
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