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Blunderbuss Flintlock Pistol

SKU#: GI-1002
MSRP:$550.00
Price: $425.00

 

18th century blunderbuss flintlock pistol has a smooth bore functional brass barrel and wooden butt. This rare pistol includes an integral bayonet. The bayonet is spring loaded and when released springs forward and locks in place. This blunderbuss pistol was a favorite firearm of Pirates.

A blunderbuss is a muzzle-loading firearm with a flared, trumpet-like barrel and is the predecessor to the shotgun. Most of these weapons are mid-sized, being smaller than most shoulder-fired arms, but larger than a pistol. Although fitted with a butt, the dimensions suggest that most were not really intended to be fired from the shoulder and were instead fired from the hip. The compact dimensions of a blunderbuss would facilitate use in small spaces (e.g. on a ship, or in a house) and would also make storage easier. For those requiring an even smaller weapon, blunderbuss pistols were also produced.

The funnel-shaped barrel (either round or elliptical) is not designed to enhance the ballistics of the weapon, but serves to facilitate loading ammunition into the muzzle. This makes it much easier to refill a blunderbuss with shot in situations where this would not normally be possible (as when riding shotgun on a stagecoach speeding down a bumpy road or on the decks & rigging of a ship).

A blunderbuss can fire multiple balls simultaneously, and generally discharges its entire load at once. This made the blunderbuss the ideal weapon for boarding ships.

Customer Reviews

(4.00)stars out of 5
# of Ratings: 1
1. on 7/12/2012, said:
4 stars out of 5
There will be quite a bit of miscellany to clean up if you are fastidious about your firearms. There was a lot of gooey residue on mine which I had to rub off. I modified my blunderbuss to fire. This took about an hour. If you do this, you will need only to remove the lockwork mounting screw and the barrel wedge to remove the barrel. I recommend you leave the top mounted bayonet in the folded position. Measure the distance from the muzzle to the breach by dropping a dowel down the barrel, then mark the dowel. You may need to relocate the flash hole to accommodate an extra deep breach plug. I had to drill my flash hole at a slight angle forward to make it work. My frizzen doesn't spark well. It isn't very hard. I will get the adventure of using Kasenit to reharden it in the near future. But for now, it works.
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