Most of the Mountain Men carried pistols (well the ones that survived anyway), a lot of them a pair of pistols, so when I came across these 1750'ish matching French Double Barrel 50cals that a French officer carried during the Revolutionary War I had to have them for my persona.
One was in really good firing condition, the other not so much. I'm guessing that one was his strong hand pistol. Both cocks had hairline cracks that might have been fine, or not. One lock caught at half cock when the trigger was pulled, the other had to have perfect screw tightness or there was so much slack in the trigger that it wouldn't work. And one barrel looked a little like a flat tire at the muzzle- I'm guessing someone dropped it at some point.
And for ram rods they had dark brown painted golf tees, yea kinda short, but for display purposes not bad.
Called some friends looking for advice and one of them recommended Ron Scott. We talked a bit and I shipped the pistols off to him. He found a guy that does micro-iron welding and that took care of the cracks. Then Ron went through everything, cleaned everything, tweaked and adjusted everything, filed the welds on the cocks so you can't even tell they were repaired. He even turned some new ramrods for the pistols, and aged em so they look almost like they've been there forever.
Got em back to day and they are now ever so sweet, tight, and perfectly functional. Pretty awesome for pistols that are what 270+ years old. Ron is amazing! I just know the pistols are happy to again be what they were meant to be.
As far as the pistols it's amazing to see four hand made locks, matched up to two hand made stocks and four hand made barrels. Everything being just the smallest bit different then everything else. And it all works. So different then todays CNC world (or dare I say 3D printer world). I am awed.
But heh, now I could use some help from you guys. The ramrods on these pistols, even the originals, were never designed to clean the bore or extract a ball (unless I'm missing something here). Of course I've got bench rods I can clean/extract with but what would folks back in the late 1700's carried with them to do the same, period correct of course. A ball starter with a screw and worm or jag? Or ????
One was in really good firing condition, the other not so much. I'm guessing that one was his strong hand pistol. Both cocks had hairline cracks that might have been fine, or not. One lock caught at half cock when the trigger was pulled, the other had to have perfect screw tightness or there was so much slack in the trigger that it wouldn't work. And one barrel looked a little like a flat tire at the muzzle- I'm guessing someone dropped it at some point.
And for ram rods they had dark brown painted golf tees, yea kinda short, but for display purposes not bad.
Called some friends looking for advice and one of them recommended Ron Scott. We talked a bit and I shipped the pistols off to him. He found a guy that does micro-iron welding and that took care of the cracks. Then Ron went through everything, cleaned everything, tweaked and adjusted everything, filed the welds on the cocks so you can't even tell they were repaired. He even turned some new ramrods for the pistols, and aged em so they look almost like they've been there forever.
Got em back to day and they are now ever so sweet, tight, and perfectly functional. Pretty awesome for pistols that are what 270+ years old. Ron is amazing! I just know the pistols are happy to again be what they were meant to be.
As far as the pistols it's amazing to see four hand made locks, matched up to two hand made stocks and four hand made barrels. Everything being just the smallest bit different then everything else. And it all works. So different then todays CNC world (or dare I say 3D printer world). I am awed.
But heh, now I could use some help from you guys. The ramrods on these pistols, even the originals, were never designed to clean the bore or extract a ball (unless I'm missing something here). Of course I've got bench rods I can clean/extract with but what would folks back in the late 1700's carried with them to do the same, period correct of course. A ball starter with a screw and worm or jag? Or ????