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Flintlock Combination
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Hi,
This lock is part of an axe pistol combination that appears on a few Pirate websites. Many of these combination axes appear to be modern replicas but this one looks authentic and stated as - probably 18th century French. Flintlocks are outside my normal knowledge zone but this appears genuine to me. Any comments welcome and can the country of origin and period be confirmed? Regards, CC |
Have you any more pictures?
A few points. The Inletting looks v rough and lacks finesse you normally see on weapons of this period Generally the wood discolours where it butts up against the metal over a few hundred years. The squareness in the frizzen and the lack of rounding where the toe hits off the spring might be a clue to recent manafacture also it is a left handed mechanism which is a biit unusual or is the image reversed Looking on my phone so image is not great so I might review this post later Regards Ken |
I wouldn't touch it with a ten foot pole! Strictly tourist.
The lock and iron bits appear to be cast. I doubt a file ever passed over any of the parts I can see. There is no patina at the metal/wood interface. The trigger plate and lock do not appear to have been inletted into the stock. There were legitimately old combination weapons but the workmanship is of a much higher quality. |
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looks worse right way round....
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Hello everyone.
I think it's a piece for tourists. A investugacion method is to place a stone and see if sparks. Typically, modern reproductions are iron rake, it does not produce sparks. Moreover, any artifact of iron or steel can rust, as if it had 200 years. There are chemical methods, oxidizing mixtures It would take more pictures. |
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Many thanks everyone, your input much appreciated and conclusive. It would have had me fooled. That is the best picture of the lock but here are some of the axe.
Regards CC |
somebody lost a good fire axe there...
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The entire rig seems counterintuitive. :rolleyes:
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