StewartLeach
40 Cal.
- Joined
- May 12, 2008
- Messages
- 415
- Reaction score
- 1
I thought I had already experienced all the ways to screw up shooting a flintlock- dry ball, dull flint, oily steel, loose jaw screw, gunk in pan, etc. Yesterday I invented a new one!
I was about fifteen shots into an afternoon, and was picking the vent. Had one of those highly artistic, hand forged, period correct picks, with a twisted shaft and curly top loop for the idiot string I need to keep from losing my tools. My normal picking style is to insert the pointy end, wiggle and twist a bit, and withdraw. That and a slap on the breech and she goes off almost all the time.
Well, I broke the tip of the pick off in the vent hole. It was well and truly stuck, couldn't get it to come out or push on through. Out here in the semi-arid west we don't have the wet gooey gunk problem experienced by our more humid brethren, but rather a buildup of stuff more the consistency of a charcoal briquet. I hadn't toothbrushed the pan for a while, and believe that may have contributed to the problem. End of shooting session. At home I dressed down the end of a punch and tapped the fragment on through.
Anybody else done something like this? After resolving the problem I made up a new pick from stainless steel wire and a few inches of muley antler. May not be "PC", but it's unlikely to work harden and break off.
White Fox
I was about fifteen shots into an afternoon, and was picking the vent. Had one of those highly artistic, hand forged, period correct picks, with a twisted shaft and curly top loop for the idiot string I need to keep from losing my tools. My normal picking style is to insert the pointy end, wiggle and twist a bit, and withdraw. That and a slap on the breech and she goes off almost all the time.
Well, I broke the tip of the pick off in the vent hole. It was well and truly stuck, couldn't get it to come out or push on through. Out here in the semi-arid west we don't have the wet gooey gunk problem experienced by our more humid brethren, but rather a buildup of stuff more the consistency of a charcoal briquet. I hadn't toothbrushed the pan for a while, and believe that may have contributed to the problem. End of shooting session. At home I dressed down the end of a punch and tapped the fragment on through.
Anybody else done something like this? After resolving the problem I made up a new pick from stainless steel wire and a few inches of muley antler. May not be "PC", but it's unlikely to work harden and break off.
White Fox