I was looking at the photo of an 1842 Austrian tubelock in EOG Union, pg 34-35 and am having a bit of difficulty understanding just how this thing worked having never really seen one.
The caption says a fulminate packed copper tube was dropped into a pan. A hood was closed on it and when the hammer struck the hood it ignited the musket. I understand that basic premise.
What I don't see is a 'pan'. With the hood raised there is an opening into the barrel which could possibly hold a tube but it doesn't really fit my idea of a pan. And if it is how did the hammer striking the cover work to set this thing off - I'm trying to figure out just how this tube was ignited. Plus, did it have to be removed by hand before the piece was reloaded and was there a special pouch to hold these copper tubes?
The caption says a fulminate packed copper tube was dropped into a pan. A hood was closed on it and when the hammer struck the hood it ignited the musket. I understand that basic premise.
What I don't see is a 'pan'. With the hood raised there is an opening into the barrel which could possibly hold a tube but it doesn't really fit my idea of a pan. And if it is how did the hammer striking the cover work to set this thing off - I'm trying to figure out just how this tube was ignited. Plus, did it have to be removed by hand before the piece was reloaded and was there a special pouch to hold these copper tubes?
Comment