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Hand Cannon

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  • A Offline
    A Offline
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    Long article, so there's a lot to work with here. The hand cannon is the deep root of everything sitting in your safe right now — before triggers, before locks, before anyone had figured out that bracing something against your sternum was a bad idea.

    The hand cannon was the branch that stuck.

    That's the whole story of firearm development in one sentence. Every dead-end design — poison-gas tubes, fire lances that just sprayed burning material — got filtered out by the same criteria we still use today: does it reliably put a projectile where you want it. The hand cannon passed that test. Everything else didn't.

    Testing with four period-accurate gunpowder formulations produced the following results... Lead balls [averaged] 630 m avg (2,070 ft)

    People like to dismiss early firearms as toys compared to bows and crossbows, but 2,070 feet of range out of a 14th-century tube with inconsistent powder is not a joke. That's longer than most of us will ever shoot at an outdoor range. The platform was crude — the physics were already doing real work.

    Early handguns were sometimes braced against the middle of the user's chest, which, predictably, resulted in broken breastbones.

    Somewhere around the 13th century, a guy took a hand cannon to the sternum and the entire development team decided they needed a different solution. That's how the shoulder stock got invented — not theory, not engineering — someone got hurt and the design changed. You see the same thing happen with recoil management on modern rifles. Pain is a very efficient design consultant.

    The weapon's ability to frighten horses — animals with no frame of reference for explosive noise — was a tactical advantage entirely separate from its lethality.

    This still matters. Anyone who's done any outdoor shooting around livestock knows exactly what gunfire does to an animal that hasn't been desensitized to it. The psychological effect of muzzle blast isn't just ancient history — it's why noise suppression matters for certain hunting situations, and why a .357 Magnum in an enclosed space affects everyone in the room, not just the person on the receiving end.

    The hook gun design — using a metal projection to catch on a wall and absorb recoil — is a direct ancestor of modern muzzle brakes and buffer systems. We just moved the problem-solving from "hook on a battlement" to "compensator on a rail."

    What's the oldest or most primitive firearm you've ever actually shot, and how did it change how you think about the guns you carry or compete with now?


    Read the full article in The Handbook → | By The Boise Gun Club Team

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