I am given to understand that the overwhelming number of households in the colonial are could afford only one firearm. additionally, many of these households were subject to military service of some sort, which entailed at least one male member of the household showing up on the town muster field with a serviceable weapon, ball and powder.
additionally, if this fellow could only afford one gun, he would pick one which could shoot both ball and shot, thus maximizing his chances of putting something on the table.
Paper is just Like a patch. I had one rifle where the weave had to run North by north west with 2f north be northwest by west with 3f to get the best.Most of my guns have shot best with the weave running east by south. Unless its raining and 3500 foot elevation where my weave needs to run east by south east be east.Artificer said:Back when I competed with a Navy Arms Brown Bess Carbine, there really was only one size of ball mold for "close to .75 cal." and that cast a .735 ball for the .753 bore diameter. I tried as many card and wad combinations as I could, though again there were not that many back then to choose from and found nothing that shot well. So I used a patch and that allowed me to split the ball on a double bit axe at 25 yards every time I did not mess the shot up. It also allowed hitting a one gallon milk jug 9 out of 10 times at 100 yards, again IF I did not mess up the shot.
Back then I never thought about using a paper wrap for the ball. The only question I have about that is since the paper almost has to overlap, do you try to put the overlap in the same position each time you load it in the barrel?
Gus
Loyalist Dave said:I am given to understand that the overwhelming number of households in the colonial are could afford only one firearm. additionally, many of these households were subject to military service of some sort, which entailed at least one male member of the household showing up on the town muster field with a serviceable weapon, ball and powder.
additionally, if this fellow could only afford one gun, he would pick one which could shoot both ball and shot, thus maximizing his chances of putting something on the table.
Well most militia laws require all males of the age of 16, and up to the age of 50 or 60, to show up for muster, equipped...so IF a son was still at home at 16, then both the father and the son would need to be armed.
As for versatility, that was probably the default position. Fusils were a lot cheaper than rifles and so would be the more common choice, and though they could use shot, shooting shot is expensive compared to a ball.
LD
were most ball cast by the user during this period?
Interesting. I've never run across any description of that. References?Rifleman1776 said:”¦.it was usually done by the village blacksmith or a similar craftsman. When the British controlled the land they brought moulds to the 'smith and required him to do the casting. Making extras and keeping them was forbidden and could result in severe punishment, even death. But they often did keep extras.
tenngun said:Paper is just Like a patch. I had one rifle where the weave had to run North by north west with 2f north be northwest by west with 3f to get the best.Most of my guns have shot best with the weave running east by south. Unless its raining and 3500 foot elevation where my weave needs to run east by south east be east.Artificer said:Back then I never thought about using a paper wrap for the ball. The only question I have about that is since the paper almost has to overlap, do you try to put the overlap in the same position each time you load it in the barrel?
Gus
I can see how a fusil would cost less than a rifle, since it requires less work (no rifling need be cut), and ornamentation would be unexpected. by way of dumb questions - were most ball cast by the user during this period? also, if you're casting shot (swan shot?) aside from the value of the shooter's time (which I think was considered pretty much de minimus) is there a substantial difference between the lead in a charge of shot and the lead in a ball? was lead an expensive commodity?
Artificer said:The reason I questioned the way the ball was loaded with paper is if the paper overlaps on the ball and is not loaded with the overlap in a uniform/repeatable manner, it will still send the ball off on a different direction depending on where the overlap was loaded and came out of the bore. Now, if the paper did not overlap, then it would provide a uniform wrap around the ball and not send the ball off in different directions.
Gus
Loyalist Dave said:Then think about the meat. Harvest three bunnies with one ounce loads each...you've got enough meat for say two pots of stew for a family of four. That same amount of lead would pour four .600 ball, and you need only shoot one of those and harvest a deer to have a lot more meat. If you hunt upland birds, the meat to lead ratio is worse. :shocked2:
LD
Loyalist Dave said:Yes as I wrote, it's better to eat than not to eat, however, we seem to forget when there is a gun present, there are also other options to gathering game than by shooting. Snares and the age old "rabbit stick" would be far better options.
LD
duelist1954 said:The force of the powder going off actually obturates the ball, so it fills the bore...no bouncing...very accurate.
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