Your thoughts?
I only answered the question as asked. The author made no stipulation as to whether the gun would be flint or percussion ignition.
In a flint ignition I feel there is no contest. A simple, flat faced plug in combination with a vent hole is superior to the patent breech in strength.....especially if the flint breech is cast and not forged. I also believe is is superior in ignition as it vents directly into the powder column. There may be some argument for the true Nock patent breech, but not for the ones commonly available today. After all, are they really "patent breeches" or merely plugs with a reduced powder chamber?
Percussion? While I am not an advocate of the drum and nipple, I wouldn't hesitate to use it where proper and may actually trust it more than some cast patent breeches, unless those castings were subjected to testing and certified as void free.
A properly machined percussion patent breech may be superior in strength to the standard plug and drum, especially if the drum is threaded into a thin walled barrel that doesn't allow for much thread engagement. I would bet that a drum threaded into a thick walled barrel is sufficiently strong enough to withstand some very high pressures, but know of no testing.
Not seeing them myself, I would venture to guess that the drums you've seen ejected were threaded into thin walled barrels and were either not supported sufficiently by the lock plate or were frequently removed and reinstalled or both. Or perhaps the they were threaded with loose tolerances allowing the threads to corode. I don't know. Either way, I much prefer a drum to be ejected to a breech failure.
As far as breeching goes, no hollow plug is as strong as a solid plug of the same diameter and length. I haven't seen it tested but I would wager that a barrel breeched with a solid pug and the nipple threaded properly, directly into the barrel wall will withstand much higher pressures than any pattent breech and that is why this arrangement is so popular with the big slug shooters.
I know, a lot of speculation here, but I don't have the means to test these theories. Perhaps someone else will take on the task of performing test to destruction on some barrels for us. Any takers???
The reality is that I don't think any of these are going to break off under normal shooting conditions. Enjoy, J.D.