This post appeared first at NMLRA.org
Turkey Time | Muzzle Blasts Archives March 2020
Mistress Betsey Stewarts Remarkable Quest Part 3 | Muzzle Blasts Archives March 2020
Building a Kibler Kit with Mike Brooks and Wayne Estes | August 2020 Day 5
Building a Kibler Kit with Mike Brooks and Wayne Estes | August 2020 Day 4
Building a Kibler Kit with Mike Brooks and Wayne Estes | August 2020 Day 3
Building a Kibler Kit with Mike Brooks and Wayne Estes | August 2020 Day 2
Building a Kibler Kit with Mike Brooks and Wayne Estes | August 2020 Day 1
Demonstrating Muzzleloading Barrel Rifling with Rice Barrel Co.
Rice Barrel owner Jason Schneider demonstrates ‘old school’ rifling on a vintage style rifling machine owned by the NMLRA. This demonstration was part of the 2018 TN Muzzle Loading History Banquet.
Rice Barrel Co is a longtime NMLRA Commercial Row Vendor and has supplied muzzle loader builders with fine barrels for years. Find out more on their website ricebarrels.com
An All Around Gun | Building a Swivel Breech | Muzzle Blasts Archives
The idea for this gun came to me on a deer hunting trip in November 1985, while canoeing down the flooded Muscatatuck River in southern Indiana in pursuit of whitetail. I had seen several does, but no bucks. It seemed, however, that in every other tree there was a squirrel. Normally, our gray and fox squirrels are very shy, but a week of being trapped by floodwaters had made them careless.
Installing a Breechplug | The Apprentice’s Notebook Part 1
Turkey Time | Muzzle Blasts Excerpts March 2020
Mistress Betsey Stewarts Remarkable Quest Part 3 | Muzzle Blasts Excerpts March 2020
An original Jacob George | Kentucky Rifle Foundation
We’d like to thank the Kentucky Rifle Foundation for sharing this beautiful Jacob George rifle with us on facebook.
“Jacob George, 1793 to 1850, son of Henry George a gunsmith, both of Greenwich Township, Berks County, PA. This is a signed and dated rifle so look at the rifle and try to guess it's age before you read the date. This rifle a a great example of his work, probably one of the best. It's hard not to appreciate all the work that went into this example.”
Be sure to check out The Kentucky Rifle Foundation website for more of these great Kentucky Rifles.
18th Century English- Style Pistols | Muzzle Blasts Magazine Excerpt March 2020
The Gunsmith's Shop | Colonial Williamsburg
Gunsmith George Suiter leans over his workbench, engrossed in intricate metal work. Bright sunlight pours in a large window, and he sees clearly the parts he is fitting together. He has more than thirty years of gun-making experience, but this is unexplored territory. Suiter is reproducing an eighteenth-century swivel gun.
Used by wealthy Europeans, swivel guns had two barrels, set one atop the other. One barrel has a smooth interior and fires pellets for hunting birds and other small game. The second barrel is rifled, which means it has spiraled grooves cut into its interior. The grooves make the bullet spin as it heads toward a target, which increases range, stability, and accuracy. This barrel is for big game.