First of all, loading with the frizzen closed is a real safety issue. It is not allowed at any gun club.
Should the gun slip off half cock, there is a good chance the gun would fire. Good way to lose a hand.
Tom
Absolutely.
Lets also not forget that a flintlock can fire the man charge WITHOUT, a primed pan .
As such IMO loading with the lock cockled even to ½ . While the frizzen is closed , is never a good idea
Thanks guys. I use a 1/16 vent but had heard of people oversizing the vent so the pan fills when loading the barrel (with the frizzen closed) and saves on having to prime the pan.The claim was older (18th century) guns had larger vents than today. Ive never been fortunate to observe an original up close. do you think theres anything to this?
thanks,
Ken
It pretty hard to document liners in early American rifles .
But at the same time , there are examples of liners being used on European firearms
While many surviving American examples do have larger flash holes .
IMO this was most likely from gas cutting of the softer barrels .
See the flash hole is not just a hole drilled in the barrel .
If the flash hole is don’t correctly . The hole is drilled . Then a cherry is used to concave the barrel wall on the inside of the barrel . What this does is move the main charge closer to the pan charge .
But what it also does is bake for a thinner wall around the flash hole .
As this thin section erodes. Not only does the flash hole enlarge , thus letting powder fall to the pan .
BUT also what happens is you start to reduce bore pressures as the larger hole also vents more .
In return the vent starts to wear even more form the high pressure coming out .
The invention of the liner was to provide the thinnest possible wall . “ bring the main charge as close as possible to the pan . While at the same time providing the ability to use a material that was less subject to the cutting pressures
Again IMO these larger holes most likely are not done to prime the pan but a result of use .
I would also agree that if your flash hole is so large that it primes the pan “on a lock not designed to be self priming “ , it needs to be fixed .