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5th September 2016, 03:47 PM | #1 |
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Join Date: May 2014
Location: Ireland
Posts: 543
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Blunderbuss with Cork Mail markings
Hi all
Thanks to a pervious post on A York Mail blunderbuss I have saved a good bit of money http://www.vikingsword.com/vb/showth...ht=blunderbuss The attached blunderbuss has just sold at an auction in Ireland I went to view over the weekend and on comparing the two I was confident this is a recent reproduction as per post above Things to look out for Not one screw was rounded anywhere Font on Cork Mail not square No wear on the stock chequering No makers mark on the lock proof marks did not make sence and a few other small things Incidentally the safety did not work and the sear was not engaging with the nice click noise With a bit of improving on the workmanship it would be hard to distinguish Note also the Fly or Die on the end of the barrel, which shows recent tooling marks on the inside I hope this thread is appropriate as I just want to alert others to these items Best regards Ken Last edited by Kmaddock; 5th September 2016 at 08:41 PM. |
5th September 2016, 08:18 PM | #2 |
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Join Date: Jul 2010
Location: St. Louis, MO area.
Posts: 1,623
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Hi Ken.
I happened on your Thread here and was reading same. And I clicked on the Link you provided to read the previous Thread on this blunderbuss. While scolling down reading, I noticed fellow Forum member Chris posted photos of a Spanish miquelet pistol for comment. As soon as I saw the photos of that pistol it immediatly occured to me that I have the SAME pistol, with a darker stock stain. While it generally looks good in the first photos, I'm so glad he decided not to purchase it. It's not even a real gun. The iron parts including the lock, belt clip, and even the barrel are castings (not forgings). The metal butt cap and backstrap are made of thin sheet metal, loosely fitted. This is a Tourist gun. Although the best looking one I've ever seen. I know my comments here are not on the blunderbuss. But I thought it important that I post here in view of the connection to the previous Link. Also, I'm glad you were "saved" from a potentially regretable purchase. Rick |
6th September 2016, 07:59 AM | #3 |
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Join Date: Sep 2014
Posts: 35
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That blunderbuss is well synthesised, unlike the ugly tourist gun. One further weakness is the inletting at lock and tang, which look somewhat worse than any original I have looked at (I am not an expert though). It makes me want to understand who made it and from what. The creation of charming copies for Victorian decorators is well known, and there are known past collectors who have had top-quality copies of rare guns built, ofttimes with no intent to deceive.
This one has to me the feel of a 1950s-60s faker, when top quality craftsmen were less likely to do this stuff and the 'distressed' look was a big part of making new craft furniture 'antique'. The 'no makers mark on lock' and 'barrel stamp not square' is not at all definitive. We tend to see better-quality retailed pieces or known-quality military standards, but a body like the Cork Mail probably armed their guards from lower-quality trade suppliers, perhaps by tender. The makers would not necessarily pay a quality engraver to mark trade-sourced second tier locks. The Cork Mail stamp is done with old-looking individual letter stamps and reasonably well aligned though not perfect. Letter stamps are more what you would expect in smaller more remote or colonial organisations and consistent with the lower trade quality of the components. The fly or die is also letter stamps but perhaps newer font, and is the worst feature on this gun I think. The inletting feels like the gun has been made up from two genuinely old but partial guns, and the cock clamp screw and other un-butchered screws are probably new-made. Overall, I would give it house room if it were not priced too high or for a Cork historic exhibit. Its almost OK, but a fastidious collector or museum might decline to lower the tone of the collection with it. Just my less-experienced opinion. |
6th September 2016, 12:31 PM | #4 |
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Join Date: Dec 2014
Location: Black Forest, Germany
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This pistol is a typical Indian made replika of the 1980s. I've added fotos of the same pistol and a foto of another type. Both pistols have exactly the same lock, a fact that is rarely found at original items.
corrado26 |
7th September 2016, 06:05 AM | #5 |
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Join Date: Sep 2014
Posts: 35
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Can I suggest that obvious decorator or tourist guns do not enhance this excellent forum? Perhaps a thread to help newcomers understand and distinguish decorators, or comparing real antecedents to decorator designs would be worthwhile.
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7th September 2016, 09:19 AM | #6 |
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Join Date: May 2014
Location: Ireland
Posts: 543
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I agree in principle
I do think though the blunderbuss is not a tourist item and discussing does enhance the forum by showing what good copies are being made Without this forum I would have bid north of 700 euro for this gun A rogues gallery of fakes is a good idea Regards Ken |
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