Flintlock Long Guns

Flintlock Long Guns

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Flintlock Long Guns
  • Flintlock musket versus flintlock rifle

    Please support us at https://www.patreon.com/capandball For buying Capandball Civil War cartridge boxes and cartridge formers: http://stores.ebay.com/Capandball?_trksid=p2047675.l2563 or the Capandball webpage: https://capandball.com/shop/?_termekkategoriak=capandball-products-2 Capandball Facebo...

  • The Jäger rifle and Napoleonic light infantry tactics

    Please support us at: https://www.patreon.com/capandball Buy autenthic Capandball cartridge boxes: http://www.ebay.com/itm/Civil-war-revolver-cartridge-box-in-44-caliber-2pc-/152466093823 Hello YouTube, Now this will be a bit longer than the videos I usually make. I hope you'll enjoy it as much I...

  • Practical accuracy of an original military flintlock rifle vs the musket

    Please support us at https://www.patreon.com/capandball For buying Capandball Civil War cartridge boxes and cartridge formers: http://stores.ebay.com/Capandball?_trksid=p2047675.l2563 or the Capandball webpage: https://capandball.com/shop/?_termekkategoriak=capandball-products-2 That's a film I h...

  • Hunting in snow - tuning your flintlock

    Please support us at https://www.patreon.com/capandball For buying Capandball Civil War cartridge boxes: http://stores.ebay.com/Capandball?_trksid=p2047675.l2563 It's been a long time since I've been waiting for a beautiful snowy flintlock hunting day. Well here is the story finally, with many us...

  • The Puckle Gun: Repeating Firepower in 1718

    The Puckle Gun is probably best known as that thing that had round bullets for Christians and square bullets for Turks, but there is much more to it than just that (and in addition, the square bullet version was never actually built). James Puckle designed it in 1718 as a naval defensive weapon t...

  • Chambers Flintlock Machine Gun from the 1700s

    Joseph Chambers invented a repeating flintlock weapon in the 1790s, and I think it is appropriate to consider it a "machine gun". The design used a series of superposed charges in one or more barrels, with specially designed bullets that has hollow central tubes through them. This would allow the...

  • Nock 6 Barrel Flintlock

    Henry Nock was a highly respected and very talented British gunsmith, who manufactured a wide variety of arms including military muskets for the British Army. He is probably best known on the internet for his 7-barreled volley gun (which fires all seven charges simultaneously), intended for naval...

  • Perdition to Conspirators! Magnificent 14-Barrel Flintlock

    Colonel Thomas Thornton was a wealthy and somewhat flamboyant character in England in the late 18th and early 19th century. He commanded a militia unit with which he had some disagreement, and which mutinied against his comment at Roborough Camp in 1795. Some years later, he commissioned this qu...

  • Teenagers vs the British Empire: Smith Bateman's Hall Rifle

    On May 20, 1826 the United States Congress formally presented Model 1819 Hall rifles with personalized silver plaques to the 20 members of Aikin’s Volunteers, for their “Gallantry at the Siege of Plattsburg”. The Volunteers were a group of 20 boys, aged 14-17, from the Plattsburg Academy who join...

  • Hall Model 1819: A Rifle to Change the Industrial World

    John Hall designed the first breechloading rifle to be used by the United States military, and the first breechloader issued in substantial numbers by any military worldwide. His carbines would later be the first percussion arms adopted by any military force. Hall developed a breechloading flintl...

  • Russian Model 1828 Musket from the Battle of Inkerman

    For a long time, Russian small arms were patterned closely after French designs - the Russian 1809 family was based on the French 1777 muskets, and the Russian 1828 model - like this one - were taken from the French 1822 model. This is a .69 caliber (7-line) smoothbore musket, manufactured at the...

  • Afghan Traditional Jezail

    The Jezail is the traditional rifle of the Afghan tribal fighter, although it originated in Persia (Iran). Distinctive primarily for its uniquely curved style of buttstock, these rifles still maintain a symbolic importance although they are utterly obsolete.

    Every jezail is a unique handmade ...

  • Wilson's Lorenzoni Repeating Flintlock Musket

    The Wilson family was a gunmaking dynasty in London that began in 1730 when Richard Wilson was accepted as a Master Gunmaker by the Gunmakers' Company. Wilson's eldest son William Wilson would receive the same recognition in 1755, and William's son William (junior) completed his apprenticeship in...

  • Durs Egg Ferguson - The Rifle That Didn't Shoot George Washington

    Captain Patrick Ferguson was a British officer who designed and patented a breechloading rifle in 1776, which would actually see service in the American Revolution at the Battle of Brandywine. Ferguson presented two rifles to the British military for consideration, one of them being this specific...

  • King Louis XV's Magnificent Engraved Lorenzoni Rifle

    This Lorenzoni-pattern rifle was presented to King Louis XV of France in the mid 1700s, and is an exquisite example of firearms deemed suitable for royalty at the height of the European kings. It is .38 caliber and rifled, with remarkably usable sights and a repeating mechanism with the ball and ...

  • Nock's Volley Gun: Clearing the Decks in the 1700s

    The Nock Volley Gun was actually invented by an Englishman named James Wilson in 1789, and presented to the British military as a potential infantry weapons. This was declined as impractical, but the Royal Navy found the concept interesting for shipboard use. In 1790 the Navy ordered two prototyp...

  • Firepower Back to the 1500s: Pre-Collier Repeaters

    Samuel Colt wasn't the first person to invent a revolver, and Artemas Wheeler wasn't either. Today Professor Ben Nicholson joins me to discuss the history of repeating firearms before Wheeler and Collier - a history that goes clear back to the 1500s. From Roman candle type guns like the Chambers ...

  • Movie Conversions: The Flintlock Trapdoor Springfield

    The movie industry has always had special requirements for firearms. Flintlocks, for example, can be rather finicky guns for folks to use without practice and care, and that does not work will in a filming environment where a whole scene's setup would be wasted it a flintlock fails to fire proper...

  • From the American Revolution: Short Land Pattern Brown Bess

    The standard weapon of the British Army in the American War of Independence was the “Brown Bess”, and today we are looking at a 1769 Short Land Pattern example of the Brown Bess. This was a smoothbore .75 caliber, 10.2 pound flintlock with a whopping 42 inch barrel (the Long Land Pattern it super...

  • The India Pattern Brown Bess and the HEIC F-Pattern Musket: Firepower

    A shooting comparison of the flintlock Brown Bess and the percussion lock F Pattern HEIC musket.

  • Springfield Model 1795 Musket: America's First Military Production

    The first US-production military arm was the “US musket, Charleville pattern” - known today as the Model 1795 Springfield Musket. Copied from the French 1766 model Charleville which made up the bulk of existing US arms supplies, this was a .69 caliber smoothbore flintlock with a 44.5 inch (1.13m...

  • Manton's Waterproof Flintlock

    How does one keep a flintlock action reliable in wet, riany weather? Well, let’s have a look at a flintlock shotgun designed specifically to be waterproof! This is a Joseph Manton shotgun from about 1815. Manton was not the only smith making this sort of waterproof action, but his is a fine example…