Frankly, I find flinters to be more dangerous that percussion rifles. It is no problem to fire a flinter with no priming powder in the pan. It may not go off every time, but often enough that I do not like carrying a charged flinter in my vehicle at all. I'd much rather take my chances with a cap gun.
Yes a flintlock will fire with no priming, its the sign of a good lock.
But a human or some similar creature must intentionally cock the lock, close the frizzen and pull the trigger. This is hardly an accidental discharge.
While it can happen accidentally the human still has to make it ready to fire by placing the cock in one of the cocked postions and closing the frizzen.
If a percussion gun has cap residue on the nipple it is impossible to make it safe.
The PROBABILITY of an AD is greater with the uncapped percussion or during uncapping than the cock down friizzen open flintlock. How high is the probability? I do not know. This is why I said it would make a good test subject for some enterprising type with a lot of time on his hands..
All old firearms systems have their problems compared to a late 20th century design. They are more hazardous than shooting a modern rifle, shooting a Sharps or a Remington Rolling block is
technically less "safe" than shooting a new bolt action simply due to there 19th century DESIGN features. So when shooting archaic firearms designs there is increased risk. Its a risk we choose to accept when shooting old designs. How risky is it? Its very low so long as proper gun handling is observed and the mechanics of the various processes are understood.
I have never heard of a flintlock firing with the frizzen open and the cock down.
The removal of a cap from a percussion gun is far more dangerous than depriming a flint gun but people do it all the time without incident. I have never liked doing it since becoming an adult. I did a lot of stuff when I was a kid that I would not do today, partly from what I learned as a kid. I have not shot a percussion gun off the range in so long that I don't recall how I used to manage this I know I decapped them but I have not shot a percussion
As I previously pointed out it can be related to how the cap was made (think foil lined Remington), to the nipple fit and possibly the phase of the moon, state of the tide and what side of the bed "Murphy" got up on that morning. It is obvious from the number of people shooting percussion guns with no problems, including thousands of rounds myself, that its very rare.
I never advocated people not using percussion guns. It is not my intention to frighten people into selling all their MLs and buying new .270s. But there are things that
people need to be aware of. Its like knowing how the safety works or how to properly load. Its one of the things that needs to be in ML shooters
"knowledge base".
For example:
One should not snap a flintlock after he has pulled the load and shaken out "all the powder".
So don't snap your flintlock that was unloaded in this manner with the vent pointed up and looking in it. You may make whatever assumptions you like as to how I figured that out
The rifle was "unloaded" after all and I
foolishly checked the spark. I watched the spark go in the vent. It was likely only 1 gr of powder by weight, probably much less, but it was enough to make a "learning experience".
Oh! I meant "some FL shooter" did this
Dan