Well, here is another unusual/weird question in my quest to put together a working 18th century Artificer/Armourer tool kit to use to repair arms at reenactments and try to maintain historical accuracy (as much as possible) while doing so. .
In Dr. DeWitt Bailey’s book, Small Arms of the British Forces in America 1664-1815, I came across this reference on page 268.
“The only other item that was very occasionally supplied by the Board of Ordnance to garrison and some regimental armourers and was a stout iron double-ended cleaning rod used by the Tower work force. At Fort Stanwix, New York, in 1758, it was ordered that “An Iron Ramrod to be received from the armourer’s and the man to draw the draw the shot immediately” on coming off guard mount.
That is the only description of the rod found in Bailey’s book and there is no picture of such a rod. I’m guessing that one end was threaded for a ball puller and the other end was formed into a worm, though that is PURE speculation on my part. (I’m also guessing no such rods survive as they would have been used for something else or sold for scrap years later.)
The reason they needed such a rod was because many of the Brown Bess muskets of the F&I War time period came with wooden ram rods. Thus, no way to screw on a ball puller or even the later threaded worms. (Seems they used a tapered coiled wire worm on the wooden rods, but that was only to tie tow on the worm to clean the barrel.)
Well, back in the early 1980’s, I took a section of long brass rod and threaded one end for ball pullers and breech face cleaning scrapers. I can’t tell you how many times that rod REALLY came in handy when I worked the NSSA Spring and Fall National Championships and when I was the Team Armourer for the U.S. International Muzzle Loading Team.
However to my knowledge, they would not have used a brass rod in the 18th century. I also realize that during the 18th century, they used the term “Iron” quite often in place of “steel” for ramrods and other things, when the Iron Rammers were actually steel. So to make such a rod to take to reenactments, it most certainly can be made of steel, but there’s the rub. I don’t know what would be the best steel to buy to make such a rod.
I do know I will have to get at least a 48” rod as some of the musket barrels are 44”.long. I want to be able to at least case harden the male threaded end with Kasenit. I’m thinking of drilling and tapping the other end as female threads so I can use breech face scrapers and that end will need to be case hardened as well. Then I figure to make “T” handles for both ends out of maybe brass or iron/steel. (Since I’m not sure what the original “double-ended” rod looked like, I’m hoping this will be sufficiently authentic.)
Besides being able to at least case harden the ends, I’m concerned with “machineability” and resistance to chipping when machined so it will have good threads. I'm guessing I will need to forge out the end for the male threads. I have been studying hot and cold rolled rod and steel and quite frankly I am as confused as much as I was before I started researching the type of steel to use. I’m also not sure how much stress I need to consider for the steel.
Does anyone have a suggestion on what type of steel rod would be good for this?
Thank you, Gus