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Those of you familiar with my Blog have probably read the several
articles therein about survival. And yes, I've poked a bit of fun at those who think survival can be measured by the size of your knife. But an on-going thread, bounced around amongst a few of use keeps coming back to the little survival rifle/shotgun (called a 'drilling' in gunsmith-speak) the Air Force included in their comprehensive survival pack. As best I can recall this was a .22 Hornet rifle / . 410 shotgun that folded up. Ammunition was carried in the stock, which was all aluminum. The purpose of such a weapon was not defense but a means of feeding yourself. There are civilian versions of such over & under weapons but they are heavy and tend to be expensive. But last night I stumbled upon what may be a suitable substitute: A black-powder pistol. (!??) A cap & ball pistol, typically a replica (the real thing, in good condition, is worth thousands of dollars) is inexpensive and not very heavy. It's also not very accurate :-) ...but hear me out before condemning the idea. With black-powder you pour a measured amount of powder into one of the six chambers then insert a wad of some sort, atop which you place a round ball, a cone shaped bullet OR A MEASURED AMOUNT OF BIRDSHOT. Another wad is installed atop the bullet and the charge is compressed using the lever built-in to the underside of the barrel. A percussion cap is then installed on the nipple and you go on to the next chamber. There are a couple of features not generally known to those who do NOT regularly fire black-powder weapons... especially cap & ball ...that makes this idea worthy of thought. One is that when we do away with the cartridge case -- the brass part of the 'bullet' -- the weight & cube of our ammunition. Fifty rounds for a black-powder weapon weighs but a fraction of 50 rounds for a regular pistol. And since the ammo is not made-up it does not have a prescribed shape. This allows you to store the bullets, powder and caps in whatever space is most convenient. Another factor is that you'll probably find shot to be more useful than ball... yet you'll still want to keep one or two chambers charged with ball. This presents no problem. The other four chambers may be charged with shot, fired, then charged again, leaving the chambers charged with ball (or with a conical bullet) undisturbed, giving you one or two 'insurance' shots to protect yourself from the ravages of an enraged porcupine or ptarmigan. Firing shotgun pellets through a rifled bore does neither the bore nor the pellets any good but given the purpose of this weapon the traditional arguments against this kind of use have no basis. Just a thot. Outside the box. -R.S.Hoover |
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