<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><rss xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/" xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/" xmlns:atom="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom" version="2.0"><channel><title><![CDATA[Flintlock Mechanism]]></title><description><![CDATA[<p dir="auto">Spent some time down a rabbit hole on flintlock history this week and came across a solid breakdown of the mechanism. Worth talking through because there's more going on here than most people realize.</p>
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<p dir="auto">A formation equipped entirely with flintlocks could output ten times as many shots in an equivalent period of time as a typical early 17th-century pike and shot formation equipped with matchlocks.</p>
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<p dir="auto">Ten times. That's not a marginal improvement — that's the kind of number that ends entire categories of warfare. The pike, the sword, heavily armored cavalry — all of them collapsed in relevance once that math became undeniable. Next time someone complains about mag capacity limits, remind them this conversation goes back four hundred years.</p>
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<p dir="auto">The flintlock solved problems that had plagued earlier ignition systems for over a century — unreliable pan covers, weather sensitivity, and mechanical complexity — and it did so with a parts count low enough that armies could manufacture and field it at scale.</p>
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<p dir="auto">This is the part that doesn't get enough credit. The snaphaunce required you to manually open the pan cover before the gun would fire. Forget that step under stress — in a battle, in the dark, hands shaking — and you've got a very expensive club. The frizzen solving that problem with one motion was the kind of engineering insight that looks obvious in hindsight and wasn't at all in the moment.</p>
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<p dir="auto">From half-cocked, the trigger cannot release the tumbler — this is where the phrase "don't go off half-cocked" comes from, and it reflects an actual mechanical property of the lock.</p>
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<p dir="auto">Most people using that phrase have never touched a flintlock. Same with "flash in the pan" — a misfire where the priming charge burns but the main charge doesn't catch. "Lock, stock and barrel." All of them straight out of the manual for a weapon system that's been obsolete for 180 years. That's a legacy most firearms technology never gets close to.</p>
<p dir="auto">The Brandon flint industry detail buried near the end of the article is the one that stuck with me — over 400,000 flints a month to a single army, workers dying from the dust, an entire regional economy built around one small component. Running 500 rounds through a modern pistol on a range day, I don't think about what the supply chain for that looks like at scale. The flintlock era made that question unavoidable.</p>
<p dir="auto">For those of you who've shot a flintlock — whether at a primitive shoots, a rendezvous, or just messing around — how different does the mental process feel compared to a modern firearm, and did it change how you think about your carry gun at all?</p>
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<p dir="auto"><strong><a href="https://boisegunclub.com/handbook/flintlock-mechanism" rel="nofollow ugc">Read the full article in The Handbook →</a></strong> | By The Boise Gun Club Team</p>
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