Sloppy work is sloppy work.
Sloppy work in the past is no excuse for sloppy work now.
Sure there was LOTS of sloppy work in days past, just like now. I once owned a 45-70 Borchardt military with .040+ headspace. I rebarreled a modern production American made lever action that had about .030".
I have a modern made copy of a 1876 Winchester in the shop that the barrel was extremely poorly chambered and the barrel was not even finger tight in the action. "Made in Italy" stamped on the barrel. But who wants one this loose today?
ML barrels are usually easier to fix and not really that tough to do right in the first place.
I have pulled a breech or two from original guns and some new ones.
Some originals are good. Some not. Just like now. Some will turn out from being tight then turn in 1/8 to 1/4 turn farther than they should. Should we make them like that too??? The modern factory made ML stuff is usually pretty grim with fouling/oil traps being the norm.
Fouling/oil traps (they are one in the same) are pure unadulterated bull $#@*. They make the gun hard to clean and forment misfires. There is no reason to make a breech plug like the rebated plug in my first post. If had about ring of fouling full depth of the rebate when I pulled it out. There is no way to get the fouling out of this reliably and if it is removed there is a solvent/oil trap that can affect the next charge put in the barrel. The plug is like it was intentionally made to trap fouling. Again who would want one if they had a choice?
There is just no excuse for sloppy breeching. Its not that hard to do it right.
Maybe I will re-install that rebated plug and do a bore scope video and see how it looks from the inside. Then show the plug on a couple of barrels I have breeched for comparison.
Today we have the spectre of highly corrosive substitute powders being used in the gun then the fouling trap takes on a whole new meaning since this stuff loves to get into hiding places and eat out holes. Yeah it does eat "crawdad holes". As related to me by a friend who has looked into this by pulling breeches several years ago and recently by a poster on this or probably another site who lives in Germany where the gov't proof house told him the same thing about perchlorate powders.
Of course in the process of talking about the breeching of original guns we should also discuss people getting breechplugs imbedded in their heads. Which happened. I would guess that this was usually fatal but at least one shooter survived.
There is a historical account of this in one of my old Buckskin Reports written by a physician about 1840. The patient not only lived but lived for a couple of years before going to the doctor complaining of headaches, the story was so amazing the doctor wrote it up. I guess I should dig it up and post a jpeg of the page.
Below is a breechplug I took out of a very rusty barrel back about 1968 Its been in a series of drawers since. I have the drum too. The nipple hole is rusted out completely no threads but the drum threads are very nice.
The breech face is heavily pitted and is slightly cupped likely from the corrosion. The bore was apparently tapped for the threads or the bore rusted out to that diameter. There was no way of telling due to the amount of pitting. I have never cleaned it up in anyway. The barrel was lined at the time I pulled the plug back in my somewhat poorly informed or over enthusiastic youth.
But the threads are *not* pitted except where the pitting ate into the face of the threads on one side other than this which is about 1/3 the distance around it still shows the marks on the threads from the screw plate. I suspect the barrel dates from the 1830s as it appears to be a tapered forged barrel with what are likely hot filing marks on the bottom 3 flats.
The reason the threads are not pitted because the threads were well sealed by technique and because the threads had a tighter fit than modern "tolerance" allows. The tap made the screw plate or the screw plate made the tap. The close fit and the fact that the threads on the plug went in as deep as the tap did means there was no fouling trap/oil trap. I think the corrosion ate back and got to the threads in one place since the lead thread is not pitted and shows were it stopped against the end of the threads. You can see this in the photo.
This was actually a pretty good breech job but its impossible to recreate unless the plug maker takes a great deal of trouble to make the plug a tight fit in the threads and grinds a tap to make threads right to the bottom of the hole. If the hole is shouldered the threads can be rebated so long as the face of the plug seats against the shoulder and seals the bore.
Dan