enow.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: flintlock barrel system for shotguns

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Lock (firearm) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lock_(firearm)

    Side-by-side shotguns and hunting rifles continued to use side-locks until the advent of the boxlock patented by Anson and Deeley in 1875. Side-lock shotguns have two separate lock plates mounted to the sides of the butt of the gun and not the receiver. In the boxlock, the components of the firing mechanism are contained within the frame of the ...

  3. Flintlock - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flintlock

    Nonetheless, the Crespi System was experimented with by the British during the Napoleonic Wars, and percussion Halls guns saw service in the American Civil War. Flintlock weapons were commonly used until the mid 19th century, when they were replaced by percussion lock systems. Even though they have long been considered obsolete, flintlock ...

  4. Kalthoff repeater - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kalthoff_repeater

    Two wheellock magazine guns, made circa 1645 and 1650 respectively, are attributed to Habrecht. [14] These guns use a different breech system; the breech is quarter-cylindrical, and rotates at an axis parallel to the bore. [14] This breech had one or two chambers. [3] A later gun by Dutch gunmaker Alexander Hartingk, uses a similar breech. [3]

  5. Repeating firearm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Repeating_firearm

    The flintlock Kalthoff repeaters by Mathias Kalthoff, circa. 1656–1694, at Livrustkammaren. A repeating firearm or repeater is any firearm (either a handgun or long gun) that is designed for multiple, repeated firings before the gun has to be reloaded with new ammunition.

  6. Action (firearms) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Action_(firearms)

    A break action is a type of firearm where the barrel(s) are hinged and can be "broken open" to expose the breech. Multi-barrel break action firearms are usually subdivided into over-and-under or side-by-side configurations for two barrel configurations or "combination gun" when mixed rifle and shotgun barrels are used.

  7. Maynard tape primer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maynard_tape_primer

    Diagram of a Springfield Model 1855 Musket's lock mechanism. The small plate with the eagle on it is the cover for the Maynard tape system. Maynard's new system still required the musket's powder and Minié ball to be loaded conventionally into the barrel, but the tape system meant that the percussion cap no longer needed to be manually loaded onto the percussion lock's nipple.

  8. Chelembron system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chelembron_system

    The Chelembron system was a magazine system used for flintlock repeating rifles that originated around 1668. While the invention of the system is attributed to Michele Lorenzoni, the system is named after French gun-makers who made many guns in India using the system.

  9. Boxlock action - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boxlock_action

    The boxlock action as used in shotguns was the result of a long evolution of hammerless actions, created by two gunsmiths, Anson and Deeley, working for the Westley-Richards company in 1875. The contribution of Anson and Deeley was in the simple and elegant lock mechanism, which provided a hammerless action with fewer moving parts than exposed ...

  1. Ads

    related to: flintlock barrel system for shotguns