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Hi Gus,
I took a quick look- the best documentation I have at the moment is a tapered iron ramrod tip on a 1774 Oerter rifle featured in Moravian Gunmaking II by my friend Bob Lienemann, pg 123. It does not specifically state it was brazed. I suppose a skilled smith could forge weld something this thin but I’d burn 9 out of 10 using sheet about 0.025”.
Rich,
Thank you, that is fascinating. I've seen a couple of repro's of such a tip made, but I honestly did not know whether they were copying an original item or if it was a "fantasy item" (paraphrasing Gary Brumfield) of something they had the technology to make, but was not a true historic item.
Was this kind of tip a Moravian original idea from PA or NC, or did it come from older guns in Germany or Switzerland? I'm trying to figure about when such tips began being used and what gunsmiths made them and where? Was it a common item by 1774 or was it something fairly new at the time? Was its use confined to rifles or was it also used on smoothbores?
I'm tickled to learn such a tip was original to the period, so I'm eager to learn more.
Gus