Loren Schultz
Pilgrim
- Joined
- Oct 5, 2007
- Messages
- 4
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(Moved from a different category)
I had been planning to build a flintlock rifle for a while now and yesterday I was in an antique store and came across a musket barrel that I decided to purchase for that reason.
The Barrel:
>Stamped manufacturers name: "J Fordney Lancaster PA"
>Octagon barrel - 37 7/8" long
>Caliber - .65 (According to the seller, most likely correct.)
>Smooth bore (Musket)
>Two iron ramrod thimbles. (Forward and middle.)
>Rear mounting tab (Thimble?) missing. (Evidence of it's placement.)
>Breach plug currently loose but in good shape. (Someone removed the breach plug but did not force it back into place.) The tang has been broken at the mounting screw hole.
>Percussion drum and nipple present. Evidence of corrosive fowling over the right side of the barrel around the touch hole is obvious that the gun was converted from a flintlock to percussion at a later date.
>Visual inspection of the barrel tube looks good, clean.
You may see the pictures of the barrel at Pictures of the barrel
I would like to reconstruct the musket around the barrel.
As I only have the barrel to go on, I have allot of needed planning to give this barrel it's proper care. Here are my questions, please refer to the picture on the link.
1) The iron ramrod thimbles - Do these indicate that this might have been built as an "iron-mounted" gun? (This would indicate the direction I might go in it's reconstruction, i.e. brass or iron fittings.)
2)Does anyone recognize the makers mark?
3)What were the incised lines in location "D" for?
3) Do YOU think, I should retrofit the touch hole and rebuild it as a flintlock or retain the history of it's conversion to percussion?
There should be allot of information you can ferret out from the picture. By the information I've given on the barrel, what observations or knowledge might the readers here have to help me in this project?
I would prefer to head in the direction of the most probable reconstruction of what the gun would have looked like and I'm most cautious about the "iron mounted" look, even though I find it very intriguing.
Loren
I had been planning to build a flintlock rifle for a while now and yesterday I was in an antique store and came across a musket barrel that I decided to purchase for that reason.
The Barrel:
>Stamped manufacturers name: "J Fordney Lancaster PA"
>Octagon barrel - 37 7/8" long
>Caliber - .65 (According to the seller, most likely correct.)
>Smooth bore (Musket)
>Two iron ramrod thimbles. (Forward and middle.)
>Rear mounting tab (Thimble?) missing. (Evidence of it's placement.)
>Breach plug currently loose but in good shape. (Someone removed the breach plug but did not force it back into place.) The tang has been broken at the mounting screw hole.
>Percussion drum and nipple present. Evidence of corrosive fowling over the right side of the barrel around the touch hole is obvious that the gun was converted from a flintlock to percussion at a later date.
>Visual inspection of the barrel tube looks good, clean.
You may see the pictures of the barrel at Pictures of the barrel
I would like to reconstruct the musket around the barrel.
As I only have the barrel to go on, I have allot of needed planning to give this barrel it's proper care. Here are my questions, please refer to the picture on the link.
1) The iron ramrod thimbles - Do these indicate that this might have been built as an "iron-mounted" gun? (This would indicate the direction I might go in it's reconstruction, i.e. brass or iron fittings.)
2)Does anyone recognize the makers mark?
3)What were the incised lines in location "D" for?
3) Do YOU think, I should retrofit the touch hole and rebuild it as a flintlock or retain the history of it's conversion to percussion?
There should be allot of information you can ferret out from the picture. By the information I've given on the barrel, what observations or knowledge might the readers here have to help me in this project?
I would prefer to head in the direction of the most probable reconstruction of what the gun would have looked like and I'm most cautious about the "iron mounted" look, even though I find it very intriguing.
Loren