Percussion Revolvers

Percussion Revolvers

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Percussion Revolvers
  • The 1855 Colt Root percussion revolving carbine revisited

    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 This something I promised you a long time ago. Here is the new version of the video about the history and sho...

  • Shooting the Augustin tube lock pistol

    Please support us at: https://www.patreon.com/capandball This topic is one of my favourites: the history of the Console-Augustin tube lock percussion ignition system with some range testing of an original Augsutin Cavalry pistol. Want to support our work? By a Capandball product: http://kapszli.h...

  • Shooting the original Civil War Starr DA percussion revolver

    Please support us at: https://www.patreon.com/capandball Here is the full version of the original Starr DA percussion revolver video about its history, service record, technical details. I hope you will enjoy it as much I enjoyed shooting this old lady!

  • Remington vs Colt revolvers firing Johntson & Dow bullets

    Please support us at: https://www.patreon.com/capandball Buy a Capandball product: http://stores.ebay.com/Capandball?_trksid=p2047675.l2563 I am replicating an original civil war time combustible envelope cartridge to check the accuracy of my original 1860 Colt Army and 1863 Remington New Model A...

  • Rogers and Spencer percussion revolver - original vs repros

    Please support us at: https://www.patreon.com/capandball The Rogers and Spencer is considered one of the best revolvers of the Civil War era, and it is still very popular among target shooters. In this video I am comparing an original to a Pedersoli and to an Euroarms version. History, technical ...

  • Shooting an original 1858 Remington New Model Navy with repro Colt cartridges

    Please support us: https://www.patreon.com/capandball For buying our Civil War cartridge boxes: http://stores.ebay.com/Capandball?_trksid=p2047675.l2563 An original 1858 Remington Navy meets the closest possible repro of the Colt combustible envelope cartridges of the Civil War. Please check the ...

  • Original Civil War revolvers vs original cartridges: Colt Army, Remington, Starr, Adams

    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/termekkategoria/capandball-products-2/ The Remington, Starr, Co...

  • Presentation Colt 1851 w/ Canteen Stock

    One of the less common accessories for Colt percussion pistols is the original factory shoulder stock. And far less common still is the factory stock made with a canteen inside it! The stocks were made of two pieces of wood pressed together over a pewter drinking water canteen in the center of th...

  • The Gun as Art: Tiffany Colts from Two Eras

    The famous American jewelry company Tiffany & Co has a long history of offering decorative firearms, and today I'm looking at two of them. One is a cartridge conversion Colt from the 1870s, engraved by Nimschke and fitted with a silver-plated Tiffany "Mexican Eagle" grip. The other is a modern-pr...

  • Sisterdale Texas Confederate Revolver

    The Sisterdale revolver is one of the most original designs of the Confederate revolvers. It was devised by a group of Texans led by one Alfred Kapp, son of a German immigrant in Sisterdale, Texas. He and his compatriots made six of these revolvers on the Kapp homestead with the intention of obta...

  • Walch Navy 12-Shot Revolver

    Patented by John Walch in 1859, this is a .36 caliber revolver using superimposed chambers - meaning that each of the six chambers could hold two shots, for a total of 12 rounds before reloading. The revolver has two hammers and two side by side triggers, with the trigger for the front loading be...

  • Confederate Cofer Revolver

    T.W. Cofer was a Virginian gunsmith who made revolvers for the Confederate cause during the Civil War - although he never had a formal contract with the CSA. His pistols were sold privately to individual soldiers, and in at least one case bought in bulk by a unit commander.

    One thing that make...

  • Cochran Turret Revolver

    The Cochran turret revolver is one of the more common turret revolvers in the US, although that's a pretty low bar, as only about 150 of them were made. Turret-sytle revolvers never became popular on the commercial market because of the potential hazards posed by a chainfire when one has chambers...

  • Tucker & Sherrard Texas Confederate Revolver

    The Tucker & Sherrard (and later Sherrard & Clark) is one of the more interesting Texas Confederate revolvers. The company initially was granted a contract with the Texas state government to provide 100 revolvers per month at $50 each, and took a total of $10,000 of investment capital from the st...

  • Confederate Spiller & Burr Revolver (Presentation!)

    The Spiller & Burr was a copy of the 1854 Whitney revolver, made in .36 caliber under contract to the CSA. As with so many Confederate arms projects, many thousands were promised and only a small fraction actually delivered. The Whitney in particular suffered from a lack of suitable materials, wi...

  • Savage Navy Revolver: Almost Double Action!

    The Savage is one of the many revolvers that saw purchase and martial use during the US Civil War - and in this case, martial use on both sides. About 13,000 Savages were bought by the Union army and navy, and another 11,000 were sold commercially. Many of those commercially-sold guns were later ...

  • LeMat Grapeshot Revolvers: Design Evolution

    The LeMat grapeshot revolver is one of the most distinctive and powerful sidearms of the US Civil War, sporting both a 9-round .42 caliber cylinder of pistol bullets and a shotgun barrel as cylinder axis. Alexander LeMat received a contract for 15,000 of these guns for the Confederate military, b...

  • Colt "Brevete" Copies: Legal, Illegal, and Post-Legal

    When you think about early revolver patent infringement, the name that probably comes to mind is Rollin White. But Sam Colt had more than his share of infringement to deal with as well! Colt's most important patent was on the linking of the hammer and cylinder, so that cocking the hammer would au...

  • Lindsay's "Young American" Martial Two-Shot Pistol

    J.P. Lindsay was a former Springfield Armory employee when he designed and patented an idea for a two-shot, single-barrel pistol. The apocryphal story is that Lindsay's brother was killed in a firefight against two Indians, while reloading his single-shot rifle - so Lindsay was moved to design a ...

  • Colt Sidehammer "Root" Dragoon Prototype

    During the development of the 1860 Army revolver, Colt did consider mechanical options other than simply scaling up the 1851 Navy pattern. One of these, as evidenced by this Colt prototype, was an enlarged version of the 1855 Pocket, aka Root, revolver. That 1855 design used a solid frame and had...

  • Swing and a Miss: The Joslyn Army Revolver

    Benjamin Joslyn patented this .44 caliber, 5 shot, side-hammer revolver in 1858. He initially contracted with one W.C. Freeman to act as manufacturer and sales agent, but Freeman was unable to actually fulfill the first 500-unit order received from the US military. The contract was cancelled, Jos...

  • Springfield Arms Double Trigger Navy Revolver

    The Springfield Arms Company existed only for a brief period in 1850 and 1851, making revolvers designed by its chief engineer, James Warner, before being driven out of business by Colt patent lawyers. During that time, Springfield (no relation to the arsenal) made a variety of models in .28, .31...

  • Big Iron: Development of the Colt 1848 Dragoon Revolver

    Sam Colt’s first foray into firearms manufacturing did not end well - after 6 years, he went broke and shut down production of Paterson revolvers and revolving long guns. His guns were too expensive, too fragile, and too underpowered to become a commercial success. They did make an impression on ...

  • Freeman's Patent Revolver (No, Not Half Life)

    Patented by Austin H. Freeman in 1862, 2000 of these revolvers were manufactured by Hoard’s Armory in Watertown New York in 1863 and 1864. None were purchased by the Federal government, but they were sold to states and private individuals, and saw use in the Civil War. Freeman’s patent was for an...