Yep, my Early Lancaster fires fine upside down.....but I can't hit too well that way.....I have seen an underhammer flintlock where the lock was on bottom. Yes - it fired just fine.
Wet powder will not burn - period.
Flintlocks will (should) fire upside down. That's how you can tell if you have a good, fast lock. My Charleville and Brown Bess muskets as well as my rifle all will. Underwater? I doubt it. Once powder gets wet or even damp, it's toast.hope this is not off subject, but can a flint lock fire upside down? and under water? rely curious about it.
I keep hearing that and have tried it a few times. Never could get it go though....My rifle never fails to fire when I hold it upside down and pull the trigger. It will fire occasionally when tested with an empty pan.
They did make wheelocks that were said to fire underwaterhope this is not off subject, but can a flint lock fire upside down? and under water? rely curious about it.
What were your results with a wheellock under water? Obviously I’ve lead a sheltered life and missed where wheellocks fire underwater, could you please provide the source of this info? Thanks.They did make wheelocks that were said to fire underwater
Thank you.I don’t think it was a regular practice
This is from ‘The Great Guns’ by Harold Peterson and Robert ElmanView attachment 44773
Many years ago an article in Muzzleloader magazine detailed tests done on flint locks by Peter Alexander. He tested locks off the gun. Each lock was primed, closed, finger put over the opening to the barrel, submerged in water for 1 full minute to test for proper fit of frizzen to pan, then fired upside down. Almost all fired every time.Flintlocks usually fire easily when they are held upside down. This has been proven thousands of times.
Maybe a good test for checking frizzen to pan fit, but with that pesky opening to the barrel and the touchhole, unlikely the pan powder, let alone the main charge would have been ignited if the lock were mounted on a gun. Particularly if held under water while attempting to fire.....Many years ago an article in Muzzleloader magazine detailed tests done on flint locks by Peter Alexander. He tested locks off the gun. Each lock was primed, closed, finger put over the opening to the barrel, submerged in water for 1 full minute to test for proper fit of frizzen to pan, then fired upside down. Almost all fired every time.
Spence
PICTURES! I gotta see one of these....I don’t think it was a regular practice
This is from ‘The Great Guns’ by Harold Peterson and Robert ElmanView attachment 44773
hope this is not off subject, but can a flint lock fire upside down? and under water? rely curious about it.
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