Folks, from time to time I have to make a determined effort to remember they did not have precision measuring tools in the 18th century. These may be questions of “What came first, the chicken or the egg?” Maybe I’m completely off base, here, so please correct me if I’m mistaken. I do not have access to sources that Wallace or Gary or others have had over the years
I have a copy of the Gunsmith in Colonial Virginia by Harold Gill, JR. I sort of sped read through it, but I only noticed one estate inventory of Joshua Baker (recorded April 5th 1769 that specified cherries and there were 7 in that estate. I may have missed the word cherries in other estate lists, but they list boring tools or other things that would account for the cherries to someone inventorying the estate and who did not know what the cherries or other tools were for.
I have always assumed that gunsmiths would make or buy the cherries to cut the molds for their guns and then ream the bores of the barrels to fit the cherries they had. I’m thinking it would be easier to do it that way without precision measuring instruments nor precision machines to make a whole bunch of precision cherries to keep on hand. Is that the way they did it?
If they did it that way, how much windage would they have allowed in the bore for the patch? IOW, how much larger was the bore size than the ball size? That may not have been recorded, but it would be great to know. From even the very first time I watched “The Gunsmith of Colonial Williamsburg” back in the mid 70’s, I was extremely impressed how Wallace glued paper strips on his rifling cutter to make fine depth cutting adjustments. I’m assuming they would have done something similar to ream out the bore size of a rifle barrel for fine adjustments?
Gus