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Wheellock Question

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Thom77

32 Cal.
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Sep 6, 2013
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I see so many museum photos of wheellocks with two or even three locks. Sometimes a wheellock and matchlock. Are these just for backup as the mechanisms are not reliable?

I very much like this forum. Maybe my first post, but I'm here daily

Thom
 
Hi and welcome

Different lock mechanism is back up, same lock mechanism is superimposed loads. The "horrid tricke" :thumbsup:

best

Robin
 
Brave Sir Robin is on target which is not easy with such primitive firearms that he has been known to physically abuse by the way; he has even held one for ransom!
 
Okay, I did some googleing and I am still not sure what a superimposed load is. I know I have seen some diagrams and explanations and I believe superimposed loads fire from the same barrel. How is it loaded?
 
It is loaded carefully. They are regular loads, loaded one behind the other in the same barrel. There is a separate ignition system for each load unless provision is made to move the ignition system to the touch hole for each load. In practice this technique was awkward, impractical and frequently dangerous. The leakage of hot barrel gas from one charge to another inevitably led to some or all loads igniting at once and the sequence could not be predicted meaning occasionally the load that ignited was obstructed by the load in front, exploding the barrel and possibly the shooter along with it. It was one of many, many experiments which tried to provide multiple rounds for the shooter without reloading. It was probably the craziest one ever invented and, given the technology of the time, was doomed from the start.
 
Thank you so much for the explanation of superimposed loads.So the surviving pieces that I see were perhaps items made for royalty and the elite and not really utilitarian pieces? It seems that I see so many in collection photos. All very ornate and highly decorated
Thom
 
Or demonstration pieces. Fanciful items may have lasted because they were examples of an artisan's craft, not because they were used or useful per se.
 

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