paulvallandigham said:
Dan:
The difference here is what I have already mentioned: In talking to older shooters of flintlocks, they learned to accept the slower ignition of a flintlock, with the priming powder covering the vent hole, the powder packed right up to the outside of the vent, and the slow ignition and obvious fuse effect when the gun did fire. They have accepted an occasional flash in the pan, as expected, and part of the " Charm?" of shooting a flintlock. They taught themselves to hold their sights on target through a long wait and follow through while the main charge finally burned and fired the ball out the barrel. They just never have known any other way.
Then here I come, once a " Young whippersnapper", and show them how to make that same gun go off as fast, and sometimes faster than a percussion gun, destroying the advantage they have over newer flintlock shooters with all the years spent learning to hold those sights on target through the long slow firing sequence, by teaching guys how to get the gun to go off so fast that the sights don't have a chance to move.
It has nothing to do with age nor does it mean that everyone who might find your posts at odds with their experience is shooting slow flintlocks.
It has to do with the impossibility of making a flint gun to fire as fast as a percussion through some minor manipulation of the main charge at the vent. Or that someone can SEE the main charge fire before the cock is fully down.
High speed photos of flintlocks firing the priming show either is IMPOSSIBLE. UNLESS you have a poorly designed percussion breech that always hang fires then its about as fast as a flint gun. I once had one that was very slow. ALWAYS produced a pop-bang as the cap fired then the ball cleared the barrel. HOWEVER, most good percussions are about as fast as a side hammer cartridge gun like an 1874 Sharps, at least by shooting, how electric timers would see it is something else. The actual ignition sequence of a percussion, from the time the cap fires until the charge exits the barrel is pretty quick. The fastest percussion I ever shot was built using the guts and hammer of a L&R "Manton" (#1700P) and a "Hawken" perc pistol breech from TOW. It had a fairly short hammer fall and the lock time was about as good as any "hammer" handgun I have ever shot.
Back to FLs, high speed photos show that the lag in the flint gun is in the ignition of the PRIMING. It takes a significant period of time to get the priming burning. It requires a slighter period of time for the priming to reach a heat level that will ignite the main charge through the vent.
Liners.
I have made quite a number of liners that are made from #10-32 stainless set screws. Counterbored to allow them to fill with FFFG or FFG powder. They are bored deep enough to place the main charge within .040 of the pan. Vent of .055"-.065" I honestly cannot see a difference in this and a White Lightning, electronic timers might, I can't. The WL BTW is simply a remake of the liner widely used by the English in FLs for decades and is excellent.
As I stated previous I have played around with a lot of vent and lock designs over the past 40 years or so. I don't like slow igntion. Slow is defined as a repro Brown Bess with a standard drilled vent. I have only shot one original flintlock. It was a 1814 Common Rifle IIRC.
It was PAINFULLY slow. But the military locks were not always the best from the speed standpoint and this appeared to be the problem. It had a replacement frizzen but otherwise appeared original. So, coupled with this, owning at least one pretty poor flinter in the 60s, a Bess musketoon repro for a time I know "slow". Do I rememebr how fast every rifle I ever owned was, no. Just a few standouts for slow. Now if you were used to shooting a Bess or something like the Common Rifle and you suddenly started shooting something like my 54 or the 16 bore "Manton" it might be possible to think it was as fast as a percussion. But they are not.
Now can lock modification increase lock speed? Sure. I seemingly cut the lock time of an L&R "900DT Late English lock" by 1/2 by one very simple mod. Perhaps your rifle fell into the slow category and you found a work around to make it more like a good flintlock. It is almost impossible to buy a lock that works to its best as it comes from the box. Flabby cast springs are the most common problem. Bad cock jaw angles are also common.
Way back in the mid-60s someone made a test lock with adjustments for almost everything, replaceable frizzen curves and moveable angles etc., etc. to try to determine what made a reliable and fast lock. Wrote it up in Muzzle Blasts but they had no timers. To assume that the people who conducted these tests or others who built and shot flintlocks simply put up with slow fuse type ignition until someone of your vastly superior intellect came along to show us *how* is frankly a gross insult. You seem to think we were just to dumb to know flintlocks were as fast as percussions.
The Manton's, Nock and a host of other pretty damned smart gunsmiths in England spent their entire lives speeding up flintlocks to make wing shooting easier. They changed EVERYTHING about the lock, the breech and the vent.
Look at an American longrifle from 1775 vs a 1775 first quality British gun vs a first quality Manton recessed breech gun in the final years of flint. The wing shooters gun had to be as fast as possible and absolutely reliable.
Yet when the percussion system was perfected the English wing shooters switched almost as one BECAUSE THE LOCK TIME WAS MUCH LESS. The English rifle shooters, I have read, actually staid with flint longer than the shotgunners did.
So you suddenly find out you can tune a lock, make a cavity in the main charge and make the flint gun as fast as a percussion? You think nobody else ever did this?? Picking a loaded gun, unless you use a reamer type "pick", simply results in packed, ground powder at the vent. You can avoid this by putting a pick in BEFORE loading. BUT any *cavity* will simply FILL IN if the rifle is, jarred, carrried very far or transported. So how can this be magic? In fact a loaded flint gun will actually leak powder out the vent if vibrated as in vehicle driven on a rough road. Sometimes a significant amount, 10-20 grains. Please test this if you doubt me.
You make claims that are simply not possible in my experience. Yet your only answer is I am too dumb to know better. You seem to think you are the only one who has played with vent designs, lock changes, picking touch holes or priming levels in the pan. Or a lock with no frizzen spring. This is *not* the case.
These are a few things I consider to be fact. If a shooters rifle is slower with a 3/4 to full pan of powder than a 1/2 or less pan it is surely a mechanical problem built in or he simply thinks its faster. I typically use more priming for hunting than just shooting or matches. I can say I have never seen a difference in the "lock time" with a little powder or a lot. But I don't shoot guns with problems. I don't make them that way in the first place and fix them if they are not right otherwise.
Full pans of powder are always more reliable with no speed penalty I can see from shooting. If the vent is covered with powder it will slow ignition. But this does not mean a full pan is slow with a higher vent. Its the top layer that lights that set off the charge in most cases. The extra powder makes for a longer flash and less chance of a flash in the pan.
Years ago the hot tip was to wipe the pan with a damp finger, prime then dump the powder out leaving just what would stick to the dampness. All this ever did for me was make reliable rifles into reliable flashers. But the people who figured this out swore by it. I know a guy who screwed up the liner in a very nice, very accurate, very reliable rifle I once owned because it would not fire primed in this manner.
Vents with a deep exterior cone promote flashes in the pan if not picked/cleaned. Thus I don't do this anymore. Fouling builds up in the "cone" and seems to insulate the powder in the vent. Brushing with a stiff brush or perhaps picking is needed.
When you get independent timed testing done that proves your method is as fast as a percussion let me know. Same for the main charge firing before the cock stops moving.
Dan