Dixie Gun Works and Track of The Wolf has them. Local chert will also work. Not as good as the English flint, but they work.Flints are also hard to find.
Dixie Gun Works and Track of The Wolf has them. Local chert will also work. Not as good as the English flint, but they work.Flints are also hard to find.
I hate to brag, but I have several pounds of powder, and somewhere close to 450 pounds of lead. My on hand supply of English flints is 5 dozen.Which work better, caps of rocks, when you have no powder, shot or ball?
Civil War cameras have the film and lens mounted totally independent of each other. You can set them at different angles and misaligned with each other. So they do not always photograph what is directly in front of them. You can set up the camera off to the side of the mirror, not in the reflection, and it will take the photograph as if it is looking directly at it. If the lens and the film are offset laterally it works. Modern photographers will tell you it is impossible. But it is not. Also possible to take a picture inside a room with people in it and get every detail in the room but have none of the people appear in the photo. It can be done.Unless someone can explain it to me I’m calling BS on taking a photo straight into a mirror without seeing the camera. Any camera photographs whatever it can see in front of it. So if it’s directly in front of the mirror it’s going to show up. I can’t imagine how anything else is possible.
Fascinating stuff. Thank-you sir!Civil War camera used an 8x10 or larger negative. Sometimes much larger. They are capable of extremely high resolution. Photoshop filters often attempt to simulate what those old cameras did with chemistry. The biggest thing is that the old cameras used shift lenses that could do all sorts of neat stuff. Objects in focus at 1 foot away and 500 feet away at the same time. Or put specific parts of a photo out of focus. Take a picture of a tall building and the sides are parallel all the way up. You can take a picture looking STRAIGHT into a mirror and not get the camera in the reflection. All sorts of neat stuff.
Haha! This gave me a good chuckle! Way to stir the pot looking for a debate. Slow day at your place? Have no fear, Spring will soon be here and we can all get out more often to shoot our guns, bows, and go fly fishing.I see it time and again. At our monthly shoot yesterday, pretty much every cap lock shooter were having problems getting their rifles to fire, while the flintlock shooters went merrily on our way shooting targets. I've seen the same thing at shoots for years.
Why do people stick with cap locks, when flintlocks are so much more reliable?
I see it time and again. At our monthly shoot yesterday, pretty much every cap lock shooter were having problems getting their rifles to fire, while the flintlock shooters went merrily on our way shooting targets. I've seen the same thing at shoots for years.
Why do people stick with cap locks, when flintlocks are so much more reliable?
Sorry billraby, but I'm going to have to disagree here. I refer you to this discussion back in 2004.
https://www.muzzleloadingforum.com/threads/when-did-percussion-replace-flint.1419/The British switched late in the Napoleonic wars because of ease of use and also because it functioned better in inclement weather.
I see it time and again. At our monthly shoot yesterday, pretty much every cap lock shooter were having problems getting their rifles to fire, while the flintlock shooters went merrily on our way shooting targets. I've seen the same thing at shoots for years.
Why do people stick with cap locks, when flintlocks are so much more reliable?
Well, we've all had that problem at one time or another. I hear that the flintlock revolvers are a lot more reliable mostly because they don't have any caps to get stuck in the mechanism.Well I cant speak to rifles so much but my cap and ball revolvers have worked quite well.
I think it is just a matter of knowing what you are doing. I have seen many guys at matches get spent caps stuck in the cylinder and the cylinder seize up from fouling.
I do not have this issue usually.
Nope, it’s the guy in the mirrorI'm real old and don't know what a troll is. Otherwise, I might think this is one.
Not if you know where to look. I looked up where to find chert/flint here in NE PA, seems the area around Marshalls Creek has the proper types of stones.
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