30th March 2015, 09:46 PM | #1 |
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Show us your ball butt.... pistol
Show us your ball butt pistols!
Yes I know, it's easy, but in fact it's a very serious thread about the Turkish ball butt pistol. The shape is close to the Caucasian pistol but with a lot of inlays: wires, mother of pearl, coral... The lock can be Caucasian or "European". I just enclose some examples recently sold. If you have any of these pistols... Also do you know where they came from and if they were really used? Kubur |
30th March 2015, 09:56 PM | #2 |
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another one with Turkish / Balkans lock
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1st August 2015, 07:02 PM | #3 |
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Hello,
here are pictures of mine. Regards, Ivo |
23rd December 2020, 04:11 PM | #4 |
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Dear forum members,
I've bought attached balkan ball butt pistol. Do you know how barrel was attached to the stock? There is no place for a pin and it is only fixed by the screw on top of the lock. Example I have was with a band, but for me it looks like not original one (replacement). In some other examples I saw silver wire, but it also looks like a temporary solution (even though .. maybe from the past) |
23rd December 2020, 10:36 PM | #5 |
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Very good catch congratulations!
Please do not use a bad Moroccan band! Just a simple metal wire, iron, lead or copper will do the job Look at the photo above and let us see the result And here my ball butt, I let the pistol as it is. |
23rd December 2020, 11:40 PM | #6 |
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Hello
I wonder if the barrel is not fixed to stock for some kind of payment Affectionately |
24th December 2020, 10:52 AM | #7 | ||
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Of course Moroccan band does not fit and the wire is a way to go. Just wondered how other barrels without a wire are attached to the stock ... Quote:
http://www.vikingsword.com/vb/showth...ht=ball+pistol Can you share what have you used as a red cover of some inlays you have there (it was not a coral per what I see)? I am quite interested as I see that red decorations in ottoman pistols/muskets from Africa, Balkans, .. Do you have a barrel fixed with a pin? |
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25th December 2020, 09:48 PM | #8 |
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Merry Christmas to ALL that celebrate the Holiday.
Hi Kubur. Hope all has been well for you. I've never been able to locate one of these interesting ball-butt Balkan pistols for my collection. At least not at a reasonable price. I think the ball-butt is somewhat a carry over feature from the wheellock era. It would facilitate the hand grip draw from the holster on the horse saddle, and double as a club. And they all seemed built with no trigger guard. Very seldom have I seen any Balkan style pistol that did not include a barrel band(s). The ones that were pin fastened also appeared to European made pistols for export to the Eastern markets. Many of these pistols show up with barrel bands from different areas of the region. And many of the bands are later, period replacements - or just newer made 20th Century replacements. Although I have seen them done with very thin wire, usually brass or silver. It's not too difficult to make a plain barrel band from a sheet of steel, brass, or silver. But most "sheet" material is too thick and difficult to bend and work with. Search for "shim" material. About 0.2032mm is good. Material for missing inlays: Pearl is easiest to obtain. Supply house for musical instruments (guitars) have many shapes and sizes that can be files to fit. Or just blank sheets. Bone, even genuine camel bone can be had from suppliers for custom knife making. The bone can be cut to shape and submerged in tea where it will begin to take an aged appearance. Colored stone type inlays would be more difficult to locate material. While colored glass or even solid colored plastic is available, neither would look right. Of course, genuine semi-precious stones shaped and polished would work, the cost would be too great. I would be looking to find the approximate size red colored beads (not see-through glass) and cut/shape to size. Net looking pistols !! Rick |
26th December 2020, 06:42 PM | #9 | |
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Well I replaced some red by white bone. Many red stones are not coral, in fact a lot of them are red glass. Some red stones? have a hole, I think they were beads like in some jambiya. What I did is very bad, Rick and others will curse me, I used glue. |
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26th December 2020, 07:02 PM | #10 | ||
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Still alive. I hope that you are fine too and happy new year! Yes you are right these pistols are from the wheellock era, like the Caucasians ones. Quote:
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26th December 2020, 07:08 PM | #11 |
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....and here I add some fotos of another one with ballbutt and a fantasy gunmaker's signature on the lockplate
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26th December 2020, 07:26 PM | #12 | |
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I have another ballbutt with glass inlays and barrel band... |
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27th December 2020, 02:29 PM | #13 |
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Rick, Kubur,
Thanks for your replies! Adding for others some new pictures I've found. |
27th December 2020, 06:37 PM | #14 |
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Plus some more ..
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29th December 2020, 10:46 PM | #15 |
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These are amazing pistols, and I just wanted to add an example of mine which is of course Caucasian, but most probably a Liege product, mid 19th c.
Pretty simple. |
30th December 2020, 09:13 AM | #16 | |
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Is this your secret garden? I was thinking that you were obsessed by swords only... I'm sure that Rick will comment the lock and the barrel better than me. Very nice pistol Best wishes |
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2nd January 2021, 03:53 PM | #17 |
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Some great photos of these ball butt pistols. And Kubur, you are probably right about it's Turkish origins.
The beautiful example posted by Corado is also the first pistol of this type I've seen with a trigger guard. Looks like it was possibly added later (?) If so, it appears to have been done sometime during the period. Notice the rear of the guard being attached with screws versus the more typical nail on attachment. Jim's pistol is very interesting. Obviously of Caucasian manufacture. Simply made, but with a back-action style percussion lock. As with other guns from this Region and time, guns made with percussion locks are less commonly encountered. It's the belief of many that this was due to the small supply of percussion caps available in the Region and their high cost. The back-action percussion lock seems to have appeared sometime around the mid-1840's. Some gunsmiths felt that this action was stronger than the traditional front-action locks as used on most percussion and flintlock guns with the mainspring being positioned to the rear of the breech area versus the front. Other gunsmiths thought that it just transferred the weak area of the wood stock from the front lock bolt to the rear of the pistol grip. In fact, this is still being debated today by gun enthusiasts. Never the less, both front action and back action locks were used during the 1840-1870 period. One advantage of the back-action lock for pistols was that it allowed the use of larger caliber barrels without the need for the extra wood around the lock area. And Jim's pistol is an excellent example of this. This is also why almost every example of double barrel shotguns that became popular during this time frame have (smaller) rear-action locks. Hopefully, one day, I'll find one of these Turkish styled ball but pistols. Still looking. Meantime, my only ball butt Caucasian pistol with the interesting feature that the stock was made from a single horn. Rick |
2nd January 2021, 04:35 PM | #18 | |
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2nd January 2021, 06:53 PM | #19 |
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Hi Kubur, Ricky and Fernando!!!
Thank you so much guys! Ricky thank you so much for the great assessment and explanation. Yes, I do have a secret garden of sorts, but mostly stored away for the 15 years 'on the road' in the 'Bookmobile'. Over time I did get a few guns, but true the swords always have captivated me in the 50 years of collecting. While intriguing, the guns are far too complicated for my non mechanical understanding, but as always, historically I like them from aesthetic point of view. I really admire the knowledge of you' gun guys' !!! and Ricky thank you for the generous look at my pistol, which seems far more intriguing now! A very nice new years gift |
2nd January 2021, 07:07 PM | #20 | |
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3rd January 2021, 08:21 PM | #21 |
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Thanks Jim. Glad I could help a bit. It's reciprocal. LOL Thanks for your I.D. of my Afghan saber a couple years ago.
Rick |
6th January 2021, 10:54 PM | #22 | |
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Quote:
"1849 Cossack percussion pistol Пистолет обр 1849г Probably the most commonly seen Russian pistol from this period is the Liege manufactured 6 line Cossack Pistol. These were a purchased weapon made in Belgium and most have the Perron Tower mark of Liege on the side of the barrel (established 1853?). Some additionally have a Crown ‘V’ mark as well. Almost never Russian marked, supposedly delivered for the Crimean war Rifled, Caliber .60 land to land, 4 groove rifled .20 depth grooves (.640) diameter bore Liege proof, crown ‘V’, Peron tower mark Reported production is 2000 pistols, but too many of these are seen for this to be true." |
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