How'd You Carry A Cap 'n' Ball?
Posted: Wed Aug 10, 2011 12:15 pm
Ok - recent rumblings have got me thinking
It's 1855 - you're a middle-class businessman and you would like to defend yourself from thugs and muggers while out walking to and from your home. You purchase a cap ‘n’ ball revolver, but the question is, how do you carry it, safely? This is a pocket gun, so you have no holster.
Do you load only 5 out of the 6 chambers and rest the hammer on the empty?
Do you load all 6 and gently rest the hammer on top of the percussion cap, as for it to go off, the cap needs a sharp strike and resting the hammer on the cap should be ok, as long as you don’t drop the handgun.
The handgun you have is not an Adams, so it doesn’t have that crafty safety notch on the cylinder.
So, how were these things carried – or is the answer “personal preference”?
And no, this isn't a case of myself wanting to carry a cap 'n' ball around with me, just curious as to how you were meant to carry these things. :?:
Regards
T
It's 1855 - you're a middle-class businessman and you would like to defend yourself from thugs and muggers while out walking to and from your home. You purchase a cap ‘n’ ball revolver, but the question is, how do you carry it, safely? This is a pocket gun, so you have no holster.
Do you load only 5 out of the 6 chambers and rest the hammer on the empty?
Do you load all 6 and gently rest the hammer on top of the percussion cap, as for it to go off, the cap needs a sharp strike and resting the hammer on the cap should be ok, as long as you don’t drop the handgun.
The handgun you have is not an Adams, so it doesn’t have that crafty safety notch on the cylinder.
So, how were these things carried – or is the answer “personal preference”?
And no, this isn't a case of myself wanting to carry a cap 'n' ball around with me, just curious as to how you were meant to carry these things. :?:
Regards
T