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Help with identifying a flintlock conversion
My dad recently passed a musket on to me that he said he bought out of the 1940 Bannerman catalog as a flintlock conversion. I was hoping someone could help me identify the markings on it to help me get some info about it.
It is about 48 inches long, and about a .75 caliber. If anyone has any ideas on any of the markings I would be grateful to hear what you think. I've tried to do some research but can't find much on a musket this short or of a large caliber.
Attachment 14476Attachment 14477Attachment 14478Attachment 14479
Here are a couple more pictures. I could take more if there was anything else that would help to identify it.
Attachment 14498Attachment 14499
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Last edited by djoseph100; 07-30-2010 at 12:10 PM.
Reason: added pictures
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07-29-2010 10:41 PM
# ADS
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Sorry I can't help more, but the lock looks Prussian or Hessian to me. Do you have more photos?
Союз нерушимый республик свободных Сплотила навеки Великая Русь. Да здравствует созданный волей народов Единый, могучий Советский Союз!
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The double eagle crest certainly <looks> european ... Never seen that sort of thing used in North America.
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Very interesting. By the Consol Conversion to percussion and the double headed eagle of the Dual Monarchy you can say it is definitely Austro-Hungarian, but I am not sure which model it is. The brass bands are unusual for an A-H musket but it may signify naval or police use? What is the barrel length? Whatever model it is, A-H guns of the pre-Lorenz era (pre-1854) are scarce in this country, not terribly valuable but hard to find, you are lucky to have it.
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The barrel is 33.5 inches, with another two inches of a flange that is screwed into the stock. What is a "consol conversion"? Thanks for your input, that would explain why it wasn't showing up in the books on american muskets that I had looked through.
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Definitely foreign. Note that Bannerman was famous for making up "Frankenstein" guns. A part from this one, a part from that one....As long as it could be made to fit so he could sell a "complete" gun. Your gun may well be one of those and not a specific model identified to a specific country.
HTH,
Emri
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A "Console Conversion" is a Tube Lock conversion. Rather than using the standard percussion cap, the gun is primed with a small tube filled with fulminate of mercury. The tube is laid in the same location as the old flintlock pan and the cover is pulled down into place, the gun is cocked and, when the trigger is pulled, the hammer strikes the cover which crushes and ignites the primer. It was adopted by the Austro-Hungarian military in 1842 (IIRC) and was used with fair but not perfect success. In 1854 A-H dropped the Console action as unsuccessful and changed over to the Lorenz series of arms with the standard cap primed action used by everyone else.
A small number of Console lock weapons were imported by H. Boker during the American Civil War and sold to the US Government. The guns were converted to standard percussion (either by Boker or the US government) and used for training, none made it to the front for use in battle.
As far as Emri's thoughts, interesting, but this is a standard Austro - Hungarian military arm, not a Bannerman "Frankenstein". Bannerman did indeed get some, if not most, of the remaining Console arms in storage in Europe during the late 19th Century and may have given some thought to converting them to another action - percussion or maybe even breach-loading - but they did not "Frankenstein" this one.
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The Following 3 Members Say Thank You to gew8805 For This Useful Post:
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Thanks
Thanks for all the info. I appreciate everyone's comments.
Dave
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Looks like an Austrian 1828 flint lock conversion.
Last edited by Oatmeal Savage; 08-21-2010 at 04:22 PM.
Reason: change k to t
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it is an austrian 1828 and its not a console conversion. It takes a standard musket cap which is placed upside down on a pin located on the underside of the frizzen. When the hammer drops it hits this strike which detonates the cap and sends a jet of flame through the touch hole igniting the main charge