Michael would be proud of you TobJohn!
Bit too busy to visit here much at present!
Bit too busy to visit here much at present!
Thanks!Michael would be proud of you TobJohn!
Bit too busy to visit here much at present!
Yes, I think you are correct. The only possible method I can think of is that the catch goes between the serpentine and the barrel. Pushing the trigger button removes it from the serpentine’s path and it falls down from gravity. This seems like a terrible system, but would work with how far above the pan the serpentine is. It’s a visual inventory, so maybe the artist got the first couple on the wall wrong, and didn’t realize until he got to the gun he used as the model for the soldier holding it (the others aren’t as detailed). At that point, he already committed and just went with it lol.Tob,
I like the way you dig into things! I am very proud of you as well!
To me, the top lock can't work.
No spring is to be seen for the serpent. It can't be inside, as we can't put a spring inside the barrel, so feel that though the artist knew a lot about a tinder lock, he may not have known everything.
Even attaching the serpent to the barrel would be hard work compared to the stock, but we do know that some later hand Gonnes had this arrangement, attached to the iron anyway, even if behind the barrel on the tiller.
The second depiction is very doable, and feel this is more accurate.
Of course, I am happy to be found wrong regarding the first picture!
all the best,
Richard.
Sir;If you look at the Viking Sword Forum Hector, there are literally hundreds of detailed photos of originals.
That's all I ever used, no real measuring except one that had a lock only a half inch wide. That one took some figuring to get the guts to fit!
Here is one for a start Hector, but any posts started by Michael, (Matchlock) will have more pictures than you will see anywhere else.
http://www.vikingsword.com/vb/showthread.php?t=7542&highlight=tinderlock
Best,
R.
Sir;Here’s another gem handcrafted by the noted gunsmith and blacksmith, Brian Anderson, who hails from from VT. It is a 58-cal rifled carbine with a 24” barrel. The ‘button’ to the left of the serpentine functions as the ‘trigger’.
Stocked in cherry, it is a joy to shoulder! Although as a lefty I need to curl a finger down and back up around the wrist, akin to playing on the neck of a guitar, albeit the hand is positioned upside-down as compared to the guitar, in order to hit the button.
Can’t wait to shoot her this upcoming weekend at my Club’s annual Spring shoot!
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Sir Rudyard, has a nice ring to it...Dear Hector . I am pretty sure niether of us have been Knighted we are just plain plebs , Pukka gives you good advise much depends on what time period and national style you fancy or feel need for I allways favoured the Venician sort fits in the Tudor time frame ,And simply because it gives a 'Normal shoulder stock & a trigger where you expect it & sights where you are used to , There is a Video out shewing just such a gun is being shot . It's one of my make & Pukka shoots an Indian original for comparison . I call them the' Mary Rose' type since such styles (All vary ) where recovered in recent times from her when she sank in 1545 or thereabouts . That region produce thousands Henry the Eigth bought or wanted to buy thousands .They where the AKs of their age but all varied .Three at least are preserved in the Tower or Leeds RA as it is now . But that all up to your fancy you might go Indian Sub continent far east & anywhere in between,
Regards Rudyard
For anyone interested in this arquebus, I took some photos of the RA examples, showing different angles:Because this thread is already about 1500s snapping matchlocks and this was not enough for its own thread:
I had assumed this was mislabeled and was actually a handgonne:
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Matchlock muzzle-loading gun - Royal Armouries collections
But I just found its exact pair in lefthanded format, showing the lock mechanism:
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Gewehr: Linksseitige Handbüchse mit Luntenschloss
So far the simplest snapping lock I have seen, with not even a button to push the sear.
The museum added new photos of this gun to their collections database:For anyone interested in this arquebus, I took some photos of the RA examples, showing different angles:
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The links to the museums have side profile images and dimension, so I figured these images could help anyone interested in replicating one.
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