When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Touch hole - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Touch_hole

    A touch hole, also known as a cannon vent, is a small hole at the rear (breech) portion of the barrel of a muzzleloading gun or cannon.

  3. Flash pan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flash_pan

    The flash pan or priming pan is a small receptacle for priming powder, found next to the touch hole on muzzle-loading guns. Flash pans are found on gonnes, matchlocks, wheellocks, snaplocks, snaphances, and flintlocks.

  4. Belton flintlock - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Belton_flintlock

    The Belton flintlock was a repeating flintlock design using superposed loads, ... with a second trigger provided that slides the lock from touch hole to touch hole ...

  5. Matchlock - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matchlock

    Early German musket with serpentine lock. A matchlock or firelock [1] is a historical type of firearm wherein the gunpowder is ignited by a burning piece of flammable cord or twine that is in contact with the gunpowder through a mechanism that the musketeer activates by pulling a lever or trigger with their finger.

  6. Frizzen - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frizzen

    Flintlock mechanism The frizzen , historically called the "hammer" or the steel , [ 1 ] [ 2 ] is an L-shaped piece of steel hinged at the front used in flintlock firearms . The frizzen is held in one of two positions, opened or closed, by a leaf spring .

  7. Flintlock - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flintlock

    Flintlock muskets tended to be of large caliber and usually had no choke, allowing them to fire full-caliber balls. Military flintlock muskets tended to weigh approximately 10 pounds (4.53 kg), as heavier weapons were found to be too cumbersome, and lighter weapons were not rugged or heavy enough to be used in hand-to-hand combat.

  8. Snaphance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Snaphance

    Like the earlier snaplock and later flintlock, the snaphance drives flint onto steel to create a shower of sparks to ignite the priming powder in the pan, the flash partly passing through the touch hole into the barrel where it ignites the main charge (propellant). The flint is held in a clamp at the end of a bent lever called the cock.

  9. Lock (firearm) - Wikipedia

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

    Metallic cartridges package projectile, propellant and primer together. They are initiated by striking with a firing pin or striker that passes through the breechblock.Early metallic-cartridge, single-shot breechloading rifles, such as the British Snider–Enfield model 1866 and the American Springfield model 1873, continued to use side-mounted hammers and lock mechanisms that differed little ...