RAEDWALD
40 Cal.
The attached are taken from Lieutenant Forsyth‘s book ‘Highlands of Central India’. He of Forsyth rifling fame.
and one of the matchlock men
and one of the matchlock men
What he wanted to use and what he had on that occasion where not the same Ime still thinking Corbet But Ime easy as to who ever it was .If I still say Poor Puss .Don't think it was Corbet. Not that poetic and he used a big double rifle as I recall.
The poet quoted is William Blake, whose printmaking techniques I am trying to emulate. I was but wee thing in Malaya when we stopped the car on the road in Malaya and I was told the two shining eyes moving in front of us in the jungle was a Tiger.What he wanted to use and what he had on that occasion where not the same Ime still thinking Corbet But Ime easy as to who ever it was .If I still say Poor Puss .
Regards Rudyard
Yes big fire welds & a narrow anti chamber 4" or so seemed to work ide use them Well I have done .Just a pig to clean.I have seen a sectioned Indian matchlock in which the plug was literally a plug, tapered with the small end to the rear and the barrel hammered down onto the taper, then finished; it was apparently very strong.
Their own powder added then two balls must have really confirmed you had fired it ! .Given the internal shape of Indian matchlock breech chambers I suspect that the insistence on ‘six fingers’ was to fill the chamber. Good powder filling it and all going off at once from adiabatic heating must have been quite a brisk recoil and peak pressure.
They may have thought if one ball missed, the other would do the job
That scene in Black Robe where the guy's fussing with a match while hostile Natives are nosing around put me off "matchies" for ever! Not that I was ever into them!
Well I wasn't there but I think it likely. they loaded according to expected game or persons such as Dacoits / bandits .Though I did learn not to look for logic in India .Was the "six fingers" of powder and two balls specifically a tiger hunting load, or was this just generally common among Indian matchlock shooters? The way he phrases it as "the rule for these weapons" makes it sound like this was what Indians would load their guns with regardless what the target was. Seems like a bit of overkill to me for smaller game.
I bet a matchlock is slightly more reliable under very, extremely ideal conditions. Number one is that you have to have time to fiddle with the match - hard to do if you are stalking a tiger. Target shooting on a very nice day would be the only time I would vote for a matchlock. Here comes the tiger. Quick, adjust the match, blow on it, open the pan. Aim if there is any time left. Or keep tending the match and don't see the tiger.
Well I wasn't there but I think it likely. they loaded according to expected game or persons such as Dacoits / bandits .Though I did learn not to look for logic in India .
Rudyard
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