Do you by chance have pix of these failures and any history/details about them?Well I've witnessed more failures in Indian made ML's than most would believe.
Do you by chance have pix of these failures and any history/details about them?Well I've witnessed more failures in Indian made ML's than most would believe.
Do you by chance have pix of these failures and any history/details about them?
For anyone wondering about the barrel metal from Military Heritage ,
https://www.theworldmaterial.com/bs970-080m40-en8-steel/
This is what is being used.
Military Heritage list the exact type of metal your talking about on their website.The dealers that veteran arms uses and loyalist uses carbon steel tubing that is board out like a barrel blank much higher quality
I think it depends on what you’d call a failure.
There is only three or four documented instances of the guns actually blowing up, which is not significant.
Most of the failures I’ve seen are from the stocks breaking. I have seen in re-enactments 3-4 stocks break at the wrist and lock panel and at the butt where the wood screws are and have read about the stocks breaking online various times.
The stocks are the biggest issue with these muskets, the wood is just not appropriate for gunstocks, its a very brittle tight grained wood that doesn’t absorb stain or oil well at all.
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Military Heritage list the exact type of metal your talking about on their website.
I sent them an email inquiry about the barrels being DOM tubing, as soon as I hear back I’ll be sure to post it.
Enlighten us with your 1st hand knowledge of these failures…Well I've witnessed more failures in Indian made ML's than most would believe.
Enlighten us with your 1st hand knowledge of these failures…
No pics, I dont have a Camera or phone with me when I'm reenacting, or on the range, as for history its anecdotal from my own experience, I was there and more often than not trying to fix the problem; eg a Brown Bess lock that wouldnt hold at half cock; a lock with internal parts failing to be held together because of coarse threaded screws and ill matched tapped threads; a Frizzen that was so ill fitted it wobbled when the cock jawed Flint struck it (small brass Washers had to be hand sanded to size before the Frizzen could be shimmed up); a Breech plug that was angled up from the Barrel after firing a live proofing charge (of initially 80 gns 2fg BP) revealing hot gas leakage.... and a lot more.Do you by chance have pix of these failures and any history/details about them?
Failures of what? The numbers of them I ran through Birmingham Proof house yet Non failed. The Locks well there's another area But I put right plenty .If you have seen the workshops & tools the lock maker have to deal with you might be more charitable towards the poor sods who actually make locks ,What happens is they get nickle & dimed Or Rupee & Pice in their case down to the lowest price though they can make good stuff I know well from being in said grotty shops . Effectively You pay pea nuts you get monkeys . it's the middle men / merchant who push the roughest item the buyer will except .you must take issue with but there are many graveyards filled with they who tried to change India .vizWell I've witnessed more failures in Indian made ML's than most would believe.
Failures of what? The numbers of them I ran through Birmingham Proof house yet Non failed. The Locks well there's another area But I put right plenty .If you have seen the workshops & tools the lock maker have to deal with you might be more charitable towards the poor sods who actually make locks ,What happens is they get nickle & dimed Or Rupee & Pice in their case down to the lowest price though they can make good stuff I know well from being in said grotty shops . Effectively You pay pea nuts you get monkeys . it's the middle men / merchant who push the roughest item the buyer will except .you must take issue with but there are many graveyards filled with they who tried to change India .viz
" Now it is not good for the Christian white To Hussle the Arian brown''. For the Christien Riles & the Arian Smiles & he whereth the Christion down.
"And the end of the fight is a tombstone white with the name of the late deceased And an epitaph Dear "A fool lies here who tried to hustle the East .''
The Real Rudyard
So what you’re saying is that they are not manufactured to be firearms…even though they are intended to be every bit of a functional firearm?
Hmm…Do you work for CNN?
Well if they were manufactured to be firearms why arent the Barrels vented and proofed BEFORE theyre exported from India ?
Indian Laws dont allow for it and it would increase the cost of the musket, the desire is to sell cheap muskets to compete with Pedersoli or the like.
"Compete with Pedersoli or the like" LOL
So you have nothing…How many hours do you have ?
What about a telephone conversation to make it easier ? BTW I'm in Australia.
Anecdotal stories…no factual evidence…so again nothing…the internet can be so frustrating.No pics, I dont have a Camera or phone with me when I'm reenacting, or on the range, as for history its anecdotal from my own experience, I was there and more often than not trying to fix the problem; eg a Brown Bess lock that wouldnt hold at half cock; a lock with internal parts failing to be held together because of coarse threaded screws and ill matched tapped threads; a Frizzen that was so ill fitted it wobbled when the cock jawed Flint struck it (small brass Washers had to be hand sanded to size before the Frizzen could be shimmed up); a Breech plug that was angled up from the Barrel after firing a live proofing charge (of initially 80 gns 2fg BP) revealing hot gas leakage.... and a lot more.
But I'm not going to waste hours trying to convince anyone, feel free to go ahead and buy Indian made if thats your style, but consider this Indian made ML's arent manufactured by any one company, theyre village "crafted" from every direction; that is parts are made separately by many different individuals then assembled. Little to no quality control and no guarantees or warranty.
The Barrels arent drilled for Vents because theyre not proofed, (its not only about ease of importing) and not recommended for firing purposes. If individuals choose to proof them then go ahead, but as I mentioned earlier; here in Australia Indian made ML's arent considered acceptable on a live firing range, but are limited to Blank firing charges for reenactments.
Here in Australia we pay a premium for American and European ML's like Pedersoli and Frontier, plus the import penalties etc, why do you think that is ?
AMEN.Hi,
The important part of that report is the admonition to reenators to clean the firearms, particularly since no projectile or patch is used that scours the fowling during use. I work over reenactor guns frequently and the level of care is appalling. To some, the gun is a prop and nothing more. I was at the Battle of Bennington this year and saw musket stocks almost gray with weather damage because the finish was gone, locks and barrels corroded to the point the markings were illegible. Locks with frizzens so loose and feather springs so wimpy they fired only once in 5 or 6 tries. In the 18th century, those soldiers would have been flogged and their officers fined or demoted. I've encountered that solid gray stuff that was found in the exploded barrel and it may be due to using water to clean (which is fine) but doing the job poorly and incompletely such that residue is left in the barrel and it accretes because of the water. I've chipped that manure out of barrels and every one of those barrels was from a gun in which the owner never removed the barrel for cleaning. Many, perhaps most, reenactor don't seem to know much technically about their firelocks. After I work over their locks, they are amazed at how well they work. All I've done is bring the locks up to the standards they originally were and the reenactors are amazed because they never shot flintlocks in that condition before. They have no idea how well they should be working.
dave
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