Gooddaytoya!
40 Cal
My first muzzleloader, in the mid-70s was a swivel gun. It had two barrels, one lock, one trigger of course. You loaded both barrels, fired one, twisted the barrels until you could feel the detent engage, then fire the other barrel. The barrels were only 30 inches long, and the lock was half as long as a normal lock, as though a normal lock plate was cut in half and the internal lock parts squeezed into the available space. That made the mainspring too short for it to have enough power to slam the hammer down hard enough to light off a cap reliably. Far too many hang fires and failures to fire at all. The one thing I enjoyed about it was sanding it down and applying the old-fashioned Browning compound on the barrel when it was hot enough to make the Browning liquid sizzle as I brushed it on. Instant durable browning, no time spent rusting. It gave a beautiful deep toned
.slightly reddish very durable brown color that was evenly satin. That browning formula has to be 100% unavailable now probably because of mercury. Maybe I can find a hobby chemist to make up a batch for me.
.slightly reddish very durable brown color that was evenly satin. That browning formula has to be 100% unavailable now probably because of mercury. Maybe I can find a hobby chemist to make up a batch for me.