Thanks gentlemen! It is nice to get one of the harder to fill holes taken care of. Still have to find (and pony up the dough for) an unaltered 1892 Krag!
1879 cartouche.
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That's a very nice 1A - much nicer than mine! You did well. Wish I knew the story of the sighting notch - my three-band is square, but my two-band is like yours. I'm guessing the square came first, but both occur on both lengths so there is no obvious pattern.Comment
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Browsing through Dr. Frasca's book, he hypothesizes that Allin started work on breechloading rifles perhaps as early as late 1863, with the paper trail deliberately obscured for financial reasons during the war.
If the development process began that early, perhaps it was a function of the type and amount of weapons predominantly available for experimentation at that time? Obviously there would be plenty of the M1861s in 1863, but the M1863 production would just be getting started. So experimentation would be most expedient on the weapons at hand, which would most likely be M1861s.
Then by 1865, when the project could come out of the shadows, so to speak, perhaps it simply continued to be expedient to keep working with the M1861, with the added benefit of not ostentatiously 'chopping up' the breeches of newer weapons probably playing a synergistic role, at least until everyone was on board that they were obsolete despite only being a couple of years old.
Just a thought...?Last edited by Lead Snowstorm; 10-22-2020, 04:00.Comment
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