Rocky J said:
Round Ball.
Bill I like that idea of the hammer stalls on full cock while setting in a blind becouse I can not cock my flintlocks quietly,but walking with it or still hunting it would be at half cock.
:winking: Rocky
Sounds like you may not have the confidence that comes from experimenting with one...if you get a chance, fill your pan, close the frizzen, cock the piece, slide on a snug fitting leather hammer stall, and trip the trigger...do it again, and again, and again...nothing happens...on my locks, the flint edge hangs in the leather and stops...doesn't even open the frizzen.
In November I was sitting watching a trail that comes out of a cutover...10 pointer steps out at 25-35yds, I took careful aim, squeezed the trigger and heard a soft dull thud...looked to see that I'd forgotten to remove the hammer stall and the flint was hung on the leather...luckily the buck stopped and looked the other way for some reason...I quickly recocked the hammer, pulled off the stall, and shot him in the heart.
Point is, the leather hammer stall is an excellent safety..after you've tested it several times you'll see how foolproof it is and get the confidence from it.
Having a loaded, cocked Flintlock with a good leather hammer stall in place is no more unsafe than walking through the woods with a cocked Remington 700/.30-06 with it's safety on...no difference at all.
The Flintlock stuff is all exposed and it makes people nervous at first, but the cocked firing pin and internal safety of the .30-06 is no more safe just because it's out of sight...just experimennt with it several times to understand exactly how it works and you'll realize it's no different than the .30-06.
A cocked Flintlock with a quality hanmmer stall in place is far more safe than carrying a caplock at half cock with an exposed #11 cap on the nipple.....the hammer can drop in either case.....but the Flintlock's hammer stall is a positive safety that will prevent ignition...however, the caplock will discharge.
:v