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Strange caps

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Steel Hayes

Collector of cheap antiquities
Joined
Feb 7, 2021
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With current shortages on #10 caps, I found these at my LGS and they made me a great discount price on them(I think they were just trying to get rid of them).
The one tin that I opened and used, fired every time, but I’ve never seen these before.
4688683D-AFD7-49E9-9646-03F160E3B2D9.jpeg6F243132-6005-4A66-8221-61ECB94CE9BF.jpeg
My online search hasn’t turned up anything.
 
Do they fit on any of your guns?

The language is weird centerfire? Makes me think cartridges? Caps? Makes me think muzzleloaders.

My gut tells me they are still percussion caps. But why would they specify centerfire? As opposed to rimfire? On what? Percussion guns? Strange...

See if they fit any of your guns. They could be primers for cartridges..
 
With current shortages on #10 caps, I found these at my LGS and they made me a great discount price on them(I think they were just trying to get rid of them).
The one tin that I opened and used, fired every time, but I’ve never seen these before.
View attachment 62873View attachment 62874
My online search hasn’t turned up anything.
I used to buy that kind of caps back in the ‘70’s. Worked fine. Nothing special. Just plain old standard percussion caps.
They should work fine for you.
 
The Winchester catalog of 1899 lists their percussion caps as "Center Fire" also...I've always wondered what the heck that means, "Center Fire" as opposed to what? Perhaps just a marketing term?
 
The last time I saw caps like those, I had hair and it was dark!
Early Remington caps were good, and they fired all the time.
Remington caps out of the eighties were terrible at the best of times.
You got some of the good ones.
Your tins & boxes are probably worth more that you paid for all the caps ( to the collectors )
Good find!
 
Those are from the 80's. They probaby mis-filed them or were behind something and
not rotated. There were two sets of tins since those. They were sold stacked in rolls.
Yes the fulminate of mercury was dropped for a new phosphor type compound used
in primers today. Those are getting collectible. Back then there were few percussions
being used compared with today. I had an early Uberti 1858 that was supposed to be
stainless but was more like cast pot metal. Ubertis were not always like they became in
the 90's. They had their day of being minimal. One of the nicest early repro revolvers
was made in Spain and came in a nice box. I still have it somewhere but can't find
the darn thing. Will post when I find it. There was a time when some nice spanish
guns were being offered. This was just before Italy dominating things. I say this due
to being afraid to shoot percussion caps & powder in that early Uberti and those caps
are what was available then. And like today they were not always on the shelf.
 
Those are the same caps I used the early seventies. They were the best as I remember plus they had the foil inside. Foil=quality and dependability. That's what I thought anyway.
 

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