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Dura Flints

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ohio ramrod

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:bow: Several years back there was a company making a synthetic flint that held up for several hundred shots. Are they still around? I cann't find anything on the web and I haven't seen or heard of them recently.With the price of caps skyrocketing and my poor ability to knap flints I am thinking quite seriously about them. :bow:
 
Good riddance, IMHO. The " Duroflints" were terrible on frizzens, as the synthetic material would not fracture, or " knapp" off on contacting the frizzen. The result would be deep gouges in the face of the frizzen, that limited the number of sparks you got with each hammer fall.

You must be doing something very wrong to be having trouble with natural flint. Here's how to knapp flint with your own lock, so YOu can dispense with tht " knapping hammer " or tool you have been trying to use:


With the gun unloaded, and the prime out of the pan, cradle the gun in your left arm( right handed shooters with RH Locks) and use the outside of your thumb to lift the frizzen up while you lower the cock with your strong, right hand. You want to lift the frizzen high enough so that the edge of the flint will strike the bottom of the L-shaped frizzen, at the " heel " if you look at the " L-shape" as a human foot. Make sure you keep the rest of your thumb behind that face of the frizzen, but hold the frizzen open at that angle. Now, cock the hammer back, and trip the trigger with your right hand.

The edge of the flint will strike this sturdy "heel " of the frizzen, at a steep angle, knocking off a new, STRAIGHT edge across the width of the frizzen. A " Spawl" will be sheered off the bottom side of the flint, make for a very sharp edge that will last many shots, as long as the lock is tuned. Even if the lock is NOT tuned, you will get good sparks from a flint that is sharpened using only the frizzen.

This idea is NOT NEW. I saw it many years ago in Muzzle Blasts. My brother recently went through his collection of back issues, and found the article in the August, 1966 issue of Muzzle Blasts, at page 21. The article was submitted by a Paul Nichols, and is titled, " Sharpen Your Flint".I relearned the technique from a friend in my ML club, 15 years later, and I have not used a knapping hammer since. I am still trying to give it away!
 
i've used a technique very similar to that described by Paul and it works very well. even if you manage to completely destroy a few new flints in the process, getting to a point where you're comfortable with this will be time and money very well spent.

as far as 'duraflints,' i tried one, beat a frizzen to death, replaced the frizzen, put in a black english flint with the new frizzen, and have been using real flint ever since. i think that part of the appeal of this particular (that is, being a rockbanger) kind of shooting (as opposed to, say, centerfire pistol) is that it allows you to forego every gadget and gizmo that comes down the pike, without compelling a slavish devotion to the 'that's- how- gradpa- eddie- did- it- so- that- is- the- only- possible- way' mindset. thus, if you have an irresistable urge to get some new thingamabob, it's your money and you should spend it as you see fit, but you shouldn't feel that if you don't have the very latest and newest whatever-it-is, you're very very uncool.

ok, it's safe to come out now, the tirade is over.

just one guy's opinion.
 
I have had good luck with the Lyman flints. I have one that has fired about 50 shots so far and I am still using the original edge. It is almost translucent with no colour or bands though it. It came in a pack of two and the first one I tried had dark bands through it and fractured after about 15 shots.
 
Last summer I investigated these flints. Information I found was from a search on this forum and the internet.

Conclusion:
People who used the product liked it.
Manufacturer was no longer in business.
 
I recall a number of posts where people were displeased with them because they ate a groove in the frizzen face and couldn't be knapped in a traditional manner...had to use a diamond file, belt sander, etc ...and that Duraflint went out of business several years ago now.

To each their own of course, and I'm certainly no purist, but I never could warm up to that idea of a modern synthetic flint substitute, given that I decided to take up the challenge of learning about the old traditional Flintlock technology involving real flints & flint leathers in the cocks of hunting rifles & smoothbores...but that's just me.
 
flinthead said:
I have had good luck with the Lyman flints.

Me too. However, it's only in one of my Lyman flinters. My other Lyman flinter works great with Tom Fuller BEF's.

Kind of funny since the locks should be about identical but one of them eats BEF's for breakfast but cut stone flints last 40-50 shots.

HD
 
With some practice, flint knapping/touch up will become easier once you find which of several methofds suits you the best.
 
I third this, Rich Pierce's white flints are great! I love them and consider them better than English black flints.
 
ohio ramrod said:
:bow: Several years back there was a company making a synthetic flint that held up for several hundred shots. Are they still around? I cann't find anything on the web and I haven't seen or heard of them recently.With the price of caps skyrocketing and my poor ability to knap flints I am thinking quite seriously about them. :bow:

The problem with agate or other super tough flints is that they eat frizzens. Agate sparks great but cuts up frizzens up worse than flint.

Dan
 

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