For the love of God,... it's 0130 and I can't bring myself to turn this off...,....... masterful, Chap,... truly.
@BlokeontheRange6 жыл бұрын
It is awesome, is it not?
@thebotrchap6 жыл бұрын
High praise indeed! I’m blushing 😊
@slaughterround6435 жыл бұрын
You know, I always imagined Rob would say the time in hundreds of hours... (e.g. one hundred and thirty hours for 1:30am) Speaking of time, are you lot time travelers?? 9 months ago? (I'm joking, I know how youtube works!)
@benrobertson7855 Жыл бұрын
Ahh self control,now I am late for work.
@capandball3 жыл бұрын
I had the insturctions you used on hand for many years, but never had a will to reproduce the original cartridge. Now i did it following your video. I have never seen such overcomplicated cartridge before! :) Thanks for the tips, excellent video!
@thebotrchap3 жыл бұрын
My pleasure! I must admit I hardly ever make these any more. I use a new method which takes hardly any more time than reloading a modern cartridge. I have a vid on it but we will not release it here since YT now considers reloading as taboo.
@homerogarzajr17872 жыл бұрын
The legend himself!
@TheMysticalBadger Жыл бұрын
@@thebotrchap Is that available one utreon or any other platform?
@thebotrchap Жыл бұрын
@@TheMysticalBadger It’s on Utreon in three different languages 😊
@TheMysticalBadger Жыл бұрын
@@thebotrchap Thanks/Merci/Danke!
@myhr97175 жыл бұрын
We need a whole channel for "Chap in the shed" This shit is so therapeutic
@petergosden1Ай бұрын
Hello BOTR. Inspired by your video I have been working on cartridges for my own Chassepot. As close to the original as possible without those specific requirements for a military environment. My first discovery was the poor quality of the percussion compound in todays caps. The addition of something like toy caps became essential. Still working on even better alternatives. The second realisation was that todays caps are deeper than the original. As a consequence the needle doesn't penetrate as far, hindering ignition. Especially having to also penetrate the rubber disc. I solved that problem with a simple tool. A short metal cylinder with a blind, flat base hole the diameter of the cap but only 2/3rds as deep. I then use the larger Lee Precision flaring die insert to spread the exposed cap flanges and then reverse the insert to hammer them flat. That, coupled with a slightly longer needle, now gives 100% reliability.
@thebotrchapАй бұрын
Glad to hear you have found a solution!
@kenb70515 жыл бұрын
I think this is why the french are so good at rolling there own cigarettes
@uckfayooglegay99825 жыл бұрын
Well they have been doing it since they were 14.
@joshua72335 ай бұрын
This is soooo satisfying to watch.
@angusgreeneyeslefay94854 жыл бұрын
I just watch this video with outmost respect to this gentelman who displays so much care ,love and skill.Really exemplary attitude,thank you for this brilliant footige.
@thebotrchap4 жыл бұрын
Angus M. LeFay Thank you very much!
@grefoxke5 жыл бұрын
Awesome, I'm getting my grandfather's this summer
@johnfisk8115 жыл бұрын
Excellent work old Chap. The closer one gets to the original the better they work I have found. Trivial point: I went from normal bicycle inner tube to natural latex and invested in inner tubes made from that which were much more stretchy and less inclined to 'hang up' on the needle and were easily blown down the barrel after the bullet had passed out and the gas pressure dropped to less than the gas trapped behind the disk. The expense of the more expensive inner tubes were trivial when so many disks can be cut out of one out open t a big band. No latex gloves are too thin as is the other thought that comes to mind. Well done. This will be a standard work of reference.
@thebotrchap5 жыл бұрын
john fisk Hi, the move to latex had indeed been suggested to me shortly after making this vid. I have since bought a latex exercise band apparently for use in some form of fitness fad. It’s a bit harder to punch discs out of it but needles do seem to pierce through more easily.
@budslinger68775 жыл бұрын
I found the English version yay!
@gwtpictgwtpict42145 жыл бұрын
@rwsthedemonking Aw, could you show us on the dolly where the nasty foreigner touched you?
@slaughterround6435 жыл бұрын
The edge is real... Buddy, if you don't like it, you know where the subscribe button is. We don't need your kind around these parts.
@gehtdianschasau83725 жыл бұрын
@rwsthedemonking Du bist ein Vollpfosten.
@blueband81145 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the up load, this covers my particular interest dates in military history 1790- 1918. The Dreyse and Chassepot are my Favourite exhibits at the Royal Armoury in Leeds( frequent visitor) like Bloke on the range vids, and educational. Hip hip hurrah.
@MrGarwest5 жыл бұрын
It is great to observe how to recreate a Cartouche Mle. 1866 on KZbin. We recreate cartridges in a similar way for the sake of authenticity.We were reproducing them since the 1980s, after dismantling original cartridges to obtain data: powder charge, bullet dimensions, paper thickness etc. As can be expected, chambering such a powerful cartridge, recoil from the Gendarmerie a Cheval is punishing.The above method was also utilised for the various Dreyse cartridge models from the initial M/41 through to the final M/72 Patrone. An informative and interesting channel conveyed with a welcome sense of humour.Guy and Leonard A-R-West
@jobo16475 жыл бұрын
Simply amazing. I thought casting and loading my own ammunition was an involved process, this is an entirely different level. Excellent and interesting video, thank you!!!
@jasonb17765 жыл бұрын
Outstanding video. Thank you so much for posting it. I have struggled for a long time with those original plans as to exactly how it all fitted together. I used the 'simple' cartridge method before as you mention but it does lack a certain something. I now look forward to trying to make cartridges as good as yours. Best wishes.
@thebotrchap5 жыл бұрын
Jason Buckingham Glad it can be of use. There will be a follow up vid showing the plans for a simple tool set I have developed for speeding up the making the powder tube.
@jediknight1292 жыл бұрын
Best brown paper and parrafin wax thats what you need. As for the cartridges VERY impressive and a lot of research, You do beautiful work and I can imagine the first firing was incredibly satisfying. that's a very nice punch set, I need one soon.
@robertsacks79955 жыл бұрын
The Chap in the shop! Fun and informative.
@wierdalien15 жыл бұрын
40 minutes of the Chap. Sign me up!
5 жыл бұрын
Here I sit, calmly listening to the dulcet tones of The Chap as he meticulously assembles a very much obsolete cartridge from craft paper and glue while my inner geek is joyfully lurch dancing around the room.
@krossF5 жыл бұрын
incredible dedication to the craft!
@colinarmstrong18923 жыл бұрын
Interesting that even then they realised that powders behaved like fluids when vibrated at the correct frequency... Excellent Video keep them coming
@nirfz5 жыл бұрын
i thought you would use your tool from 21:15 to insert the "percussion assembly" into the paper to be sure it doesn't flip upside down. (also when i first saw your tools assembled i misstook the orange punch box with a first aid box and wanted to comment how safety conscious you are, until i looked closer ;-) )
@hakkonen273 жыл бұрын
That's a whole lot of work for one cartridge. You have to really like shooting a Chassepot to go to that much trouble.
@michaelmayo312719 күн бұрын
The correct name of the rifle is Dreyse Zündnadelgewehr M/41 or leichtes Perkussionsgewehr M/41 The Prussian breech-loading rifle was constructed by blacksmith Johann Nikolaus Dreyse. Dreyse, who was trained as a blacksmith, first worked in Germany and then from 1809 to 1814 in Pauli's Gun Factory in Paris, after which he founded a factory of iron goods in Sömmerda in Thuringia. Here he began to develop and modernize existing rifle designs, i.a. In 1824, he improved the construction and firing rate of the percussion caps and then set up a percussion cap factory under the Firm mane D. & Collenbusch in Sömmerda. He worked diligently to construct a unit cartridge for rifles, i.e. a unit which had to contain both bullet, gunpowder and incendiary= ( percussion cap). This led in 1827 to the invention of the firing pin rifle. The first prototype was to be reloaded like the already known rifles, but in 1836 this changed to breech-loading. The rifle was tested by various Prussian units from 1839 to 1840. This progressed satisfactorily, and on 4 December 1840 Dreyse received the order for 60,000 breech-loading rifles with associated ammunition. The production of these rifles designated “leichtes Perkussionsgewehr M/41” (Light Percussion Rifle M/41) began in the spring of 1841 in Dreyse's newly equipped factory in Sömmerda. The rifle was considered a state secret. After delivery, the rifles were stored in Berlin's clothing store. Here they lay until 1848, when, during a revolutionary uprising in Baden and Saxony, they were handed over to the Fusilier battalions of the line regiments and received their baptism of fire in street battles. The next time the Dreyse rifle was used in battle was in the Second Schleswig War in 1864. Dreyse was knighted in 1864 for his efforts. Prussia and the other major European military nations began to look around for other and better systems than the Dreyse gun. This very quickly led to better brass cartridges and the possibility of multi-cartridge magazines. Already by the time of the German-French war in 1871, a major development had taken place, and then the first magazine rifles quickly appeared.
@thebotrchap19 күн бұрын
Danke für die Zusammenfassung der Geschichte der Preussische Zündnadelgewehr. Es ist aber nicht das Thema von dieser Sendung. Wir sprechen hier von das Französische Zündnadelgewehr und seinen Munition.
@michaelmayo312719 күн бұрын
@@thebotrchap The difference is the same. The French version was a copy. And the system's history has a relevance, to those that an interested in the origins of firearm systems.
@thebotrchap19 күн бұрын
@@michaelmayo3127 The two share a common ignition principle and are single shot bolt actions. The similarity ends there. If you truly think the Chassepot is a copy, I suggest some more research is needed. It’s like saying a L-E No4 is a copy of the G98 because they are centrefire bolt-action rifles and the G98 was first.
@michaelmayo312719 күн бұрын
@@thebotrchap It's like brewing beer. The recipe is the same, but the taste's slightly different. That's why the Brits seem to think that the Enfield has a better action and is overly a better rifle, than the 98, but it's just a matter of tast. Myself, well I prefer the American Lee-Enfield mod 1917 but I also like the 98.
@liamnisbet97205 жыл бұрын
People this amazing I love this youtuber
@greglaroche17534 жыл бұрын
It would be great to have a video on how you clean the rifle after shooting. Thanks for your videos on making bullets and shooting Chassepots. There aren’t many available.
@motorgearhead2 жыл бұрын
Very interesting! I don't even own anything designed for black powder or paper cartridges but I found the concepts and methods very educational! I believe there is much to be learned from earlier technologies (firearms & even air rifles). In fact, I've started playing with paper cartridges & sabots in medium bore PCP air rifles. It's primarily for the novelty of it, as multiple sub-caliber projectiles loads have very limited range (10-15) yards. But I've found it possible to fire three .25 caliber projectiles out of a .308 air rifle and produce grouping of approximately 2" at 10-15 yards. I haven't chrono''d the 3 shot load yet and they are subsonic. But my testing of a single .25 projectile yielded 1320fps with a 27grn projectile for over 100 FPE. However, shooting proper cast bullets, the rifle is cable of nearly 3 times that power level. So again, this is a novelty. one last thought, you might be able to settle/level/compact your powder charge using an ultrasonic cleaner? just a thought... Thanks for the great video!
@davidwoodward70204 жыл бұрын
I was given a bayonet off one of these.It's a nice looking piece of kit!hopefully I'll get the rifle to add to it someday! :)
@oldweapons5 жыл бұрын
Chap, this is great!!!! Thank you!!!! We have all been weighing for it!!!!
@thebotrchap5 жыл бұрын
Boris Kheyfits Thanks, it was actually uploaded and visible through a link in the simplified Chassepot cartridge vid. It was scheduled for release at the time we got temporarily shut down and had a community strike to we were cautious about sharing reloading content.
@oldweapons5 жыл бұрын
Do we all have chances to go on watching your channel on KZbin or you will move it somewhere else?
@thebotrchap5 жыл бұрын
Boris Kheyfits In truth we were probably being over cautious and haven’t been bothered since so we will stay put for now. We do autopost to Full30 and a few other hosts but the viewer quota is a infinitesimal compared to YT. We never really found out why we were taken down but around that time the offending theme seemed to be reloading. It was my evaluation of the Chassepot cartridge conversion kit that apparently triggered the whole thing.
@oldweapons5 жыл бұрын
Do we have a hope to see a complicated Dreyse cartridge build tutorial? I have a couple of Dreyse rifles and carbines, but it’s cartridge is pretty complicated and the bullet+sabot is pretty wired. Thank you for a really fantastic content!!!!
@thebotrchap5 жыл бұрын
Boris Kheyfits Yes, most definitely. The Dreyse cartridge is actually dead easy. I’m currently compiling all the possible ways of making a sabot. I have a nice m1862 with Beck bolt to work with.
@oldweapons5 жыл бұрын
Dreyse sabot is a roll of paper that should have a long and tricky shape to accommodate a tapered-end bullet if we go for an original one. But I think there is more sense to go for cylindrical shape for a reason sake))
@thebotrchap5 жыл бұрын
Boris Kheyfits The easiest is using round ball on a wad stack or wooden cylinder. For the langblei bullet I have wound card sabots for which I have worked out the profile, I also have wound paper sabots (uses 3m of it) and will also try sabots made from a cellulose modeling putty once a kind channel supporter makes the pressing tools we have worked out.
@oldweapons5 жыл бұрын
The Chap sounds great and plenty of work. I’m not as much attracted with a spherical bullet in a “modern era” breach loading gun, but langblei bullet cartridge should be of high interest to find out the real “battle performance” of the gun. “Paper sabots” and “cellulose modeling putty” sounds as a lot of work on the issue! Will show the dimensions of the loading tools set?
@thebotrchap5 жыл бұрын
Boris Kheyfits I think it was done primarily to extend the range of the rifle. In Germany I’m told no one shoots Langblei in competitions. The sabot is so critical that accuracy will be terrible if it isn’t just right. With a ball or expanding maxiball you have repeatable results. That said I’ll do my best to get a sabot working. Ideally I’d use short cylinders of soft wood and route out a cavity to the shape of the bullet base but I don’t have that sort of tooling.
@curiouscat83963 ай бұрын
Man, that was fiddly! Young woman's work.
@blackpowderfirearmenthusia31942 жыл бұрын
Great video, thank you.
@donhill3rd5 жыл бұрын
Absolutely Amazing!!
@andyh26775 жыл бұрын
brilliant video ....24 hours to make a bag full and about 4 minutes to fire them off loving it i don't even have one of these rifles but i need to make some of these lol
@mikerutchka18365 жыл бұрын
Don't you have to clen the bore, after every few shots?
@SafetyProMalta5 жыл бұрын
Curious to know how many man-minutes per round?
@thebotrchap5 жыл бұрын
Stephen Forster Can’t quote a figure right now but with a properly divided workforce each performing a step of the process it would actually be quite efficient for the time. Aside from bullet swaging machines, no special tools or skills were necessary. They also gleaned expertise from the cigarette industry.
@saoirse53085 жыл бұрын
25:00 I think I can fix that fiddly bit. You need a bit of wood dowel a bit smaller than the tube form and about 6 inches long. 1)with the paper tube on the form set the base of the form on the table. (so that the point without the tape is facing up) 2)put the star on top. as you did at 24:25 but with the tube still on the form. No messing with the shape of it, just centered 3) Now use the bit of wood dowel to hold the star centered (stacked top to bottom it would be dowel, star, tube (on the upright form ), upright form, table top. 4) now push up on the paper tube and move it from the form to the dowel As it goes it will force the star into shape in one move. Because the dowel is slightly smaller there is room for the star points to fold over, but because the dowel & the tube form are almost the same size the tube can not change form. One push and all that star shaping is done, just mark the dowel so you don't push too far, flip the dowel (now with the tube on it and the star in place) over glue the last bit of the tube & seat the star into the glue. You're welcome.
@thebotrchap5 жыл бұрын
Saoirse This vid was filmed last year, I have since developed a tool set similar to what you describe. The vid on it is in the release pipeline.
@saoirse53085 жыл бұрын
@@thebotrchap 👍
@samuellee37295 жыл бұрын
imagine if someone thought it was a cigar and they lit it.
@petergosden14 жыл бұрын
I have just been watching the video for the third time over the last 12 months. Rivetting. Thank you Bloke. I have a Chassepot in my collection and plan to shoot it once this virus lockdown is over (next year?). I have the Accurate mould. Before I get all my equipment together for the original cartridge I was wondering what you used to produce the star shaped discs? Is there a commercial punch? Best regards. Peter.
@rags4175 жыл бұрын
Nice looking cigars !
@outspokengenius4 жыл бұрын
oh this is just grand. Now I need a chassepot. What's next a Gras? or Kropatschek? I already have a M71/88 Dutch Beaumont Vitali, 1895 Mauser, 1889 Schmidt Rubin, K31, CZ52, Zastava M57, and a Luger! And thats' not counting the more modern stuff!
@GuilhermeCargnelutti4 жыл бұрын
Hello, i have a question involving the percusion cap. In a few cartridges the percusion cap is second to the powder, in wich case it will be propelled as the bullet should, but, in this particular case, the cap comes first; as it is made out of metal, how can it leave the barrel?
@GuilhermeCargnelutti4 жыл бұрын
well, just saw this video after i commented: kzbin.info/www/bejne/f4mTlHiOjd6XqNE. it does explains a lot. I will leave my comment in case someone else wonders the same.
@thebotrchap4 жыл бұрын
@@GuilhermeCargnelutti Be aware that sometimes a modern percussion cap doesn’t exit the bore, the wings of modern caps are slightly wider than original caps and they drag a bit in the rifling. It doesn’t present any danger for the next shot but it doesn’t always get blown out like in the animation.
@vitkriklan26332 жыл бұрын
As far as I know, the chamber allows the gas to expand backwards too to blow out the rest of the paper and the cap.
@mannys91305 жыл бұрын
Excellent video Chap! We can always count on you two to give nice thorough tutorials. :) Have you considered using a drop tube to achieve a nice uniform settled powder charge? I don't know much about black powder cartridge making but I see drop tubes being described as important for metallic cartridge loading. I don't really know. Also, perhaps an electric sander would work well for vibrating that metal cylinder you use? You know, one of those types that you hold in your palm and would glide across a flat piece of wood. They vibrate fairly strongly as the sandpaper plate moves around, but not too crazy and I think it may work for your application. Anyway, just a thought. :)
@thebotrchap5 жыл бұрын
mannys9130 A drop tube would help a bit but it still wouldn’t compress the powder to the required density. I think a sander has around the same frequency and amplitude as a case tumber, I tried that and powder ends up flying everywhere. Some kind of laboratory adjustable vibration plate would be ideal.
@mannys91305 жыл бұрын
@@thebotrchap Ah, ok. Well, perhaps you can make a new video when you figure out a solid solution. :)
@johnfisk8115 жыл бұрын
An electric toothbrush did the job when I was making Chassepot cartridges.
@thebotrchap5 жыл бұрын
john fisk Ooh now there’s an idea!
@johnfisk8115 жыл бұрын
@@thebotrchap High frequency and low amplitude. As you would expect as it is to go into your mouth where a large amplitude is less than desirable......
@roadpanzir5 жыл бұрын
First class work!
@messmeister924 жыл бұрын
This is one of those uploads KZbin is going to start randomly suggesting to everyone in 10 years lol
@ROTHGLUT5 жыл бұрын
Thanks, very interesting. A video on the rifle would be nice too. Also nice scissors. Seem to be from the Leftorium, got the same...
@thebotrchap5 жыл бұрын
Rothglut's Roger Victorinox from the local haberdashery.
@tjo40874 жыл бұрын
I think murphys muskets has been renamed "the natural man". Very good content here and there
@Jagdtyger2A Жыл бұрын
Have you ever tried using 209 type shotgun primers and pelletized black powder substitutes?? Seems to me that they should work
@Jagdtyger2A2 жыл бұрын
I know this may not be historically accurate, but have you thought about using black powder pellets to make the charge? Also, what is the length and diameter of the finished powder load? I am working on a modification/design to have a machinist convert an inline black powder rifle into a needle fire rifle for my old lady. I would do the work myself except macular degeneration has progressed too much for my eyes to do the job. So I am limited to paper designs and letting someone else do the machining :(
@blairroth18123 жыл бұрын
Excellent
@RolandsSelis7 ай бұрын
You mentioned the 46-365C mould, what were the mesuurements you gave them please ?
@chestertnted3 жыл бұрын
Very interesting.
@NoahReber5 жыл бұрын
I recently got an old Stutzer m1851 and I'm currently working on refurbishing it. It's my first muzzleloader, so I got a lot of questions. First, do you guys have an idea where I can find a Range where I can shot those? I live in Frutigen Be. Second, where I can get a bullet mold for casting? Btw keep up the good work on the videos they are as entertaining as educational it's a pleasure to watch. Thank you in advance
@BlokeontheRange5 жыл бұрын
There's a muzzleloading club in Steffisburg that's probably nearest to you :)
@thebotrchap5 жыл бұрын
We are practically neighbours then! As Bloke says, the club in Steffisburg is the closest but their range hours are geared towards retired people unless they have recently modernised. I have to go up to Siselen for more sensible range hours. For bullets, no one that I know of produces the compression bullet. I had it done by a custom mould maker in the US (now retired). Hensel GmbH make a Büholzer mould and a number of maxi-ball moulds that would probably work.
@BlokeontheRange5 жыл бұрын
40-cal round ball will also work paper patched
@NoahReber5 жыл бұрын
The Chap thank you for the quick response, sad that nobody makes moldes for this geat rifle anymore.
@AdamPerkinsPhD5 жыл бұрын
Thanks for a great video.
@snook12495 жыл бұрын
Bloody brilliant 😎
@worldtraveler9305 жыл бұрын
Have you given any thoughts about nitrateing the paper and silk?
@thebotrchap5 жыл бұрын
World Traveler Forcing the cartridge to combust causes more fouling. Most of the cartridge is supposed to be blown out unburned.
@worldtraveler9305 жыл бұрын
@@thebotrchap interesting, I was thinking that chard cartridge would cause fouling and possibly start fires down range from burning bits of cartridge. These concepts might make a cracking good comparison video?
@thebotrchap5 жыл бұрын
World Traveler It has been tried extensively by French shooters. The best results in terms of continuous fire have been achieved by doing the exact opposite, namely by soaking the cartridge paper in fire retardant.
@worldtraveler9305 жыл бұрын
@@thebotrchap Interesting, today is a day of learning, so what happens to the rubber and cap? Do they exit the barrel like the wading from a shotgun or are they left behind and have to be removed like the shell casing from a shotgun?
@thebotrchap5 жыл бұрын
World Traveler Everything gets blown out. The bolt face has an annular recess just like the Dreyse, which gives the combustion gases space to swirl and evacuate debris. The idea is that the sudden pressure drop as the bullet leaves the barrel sucks everything out. The flat face of the Beck converted Dreyse bolt however can result in cartridge bases remaining stuck after firing.
@Kirkee72 жыл бұрын
Very interesting . I wish you had put your manufacturing skills to the test .
@andrewfrancis35915 жыл бұрын
You get a Blue Peter Badge for that. Hope you asked first before using mummy's sharp scissors. Great vid.
@thebotrchap5 жыл бұрын
Andrew Francis I have my own pair because I’m a leftie 😇
@betaich5 жыл бұрын
@@thebotrchap why is it that nearly all really good firearms guys on KZbin are lefties?
@thebotrchap5 жыл бұрын
betaich We are shunned, discriminated against and persecuted in the real world so we have to retreat to cyberspace 😣 😉
@michaelrogers10365 жыл бұрын
@@betaich I have pondered the same. Though Chap and Gun Jesus are the only two I can think of right now. Mind is a bit foggy this morning.
@richardanderson27423 жыл бұрын
Just a note, the center fire .577 Snider Brit cartridge went into full scale production in 1866 to equip the whole of the British empire, shooting a .577 bullet in front of 70 grains of FFg.
@thebotrchap3 жыл бұрын
Agreed but there’s a difference between something just entering production and being tried and tested through actual field use. As I mentioned, the French were perfectly aware of CF metallic cartridges, the Pauly centrefire cartridge rifle had even been presented to the French arms committee in 1813 (metallic base with card body like the early .577). In 1865-66 they however decided to go with what they were more comfortable with and had been tested in combat by the most immediate threat aka the Prussians. An unfortunate decision with the benefit of hindsight but there we go.
@FLVCTVAT_NEC_MERGITVR4 жыл бұрын
J'aimerais voir ces épisodes en français aussi! Belle vidéo.
@Trumplican3 жыл бұрын
18:34 safety is important but some people get carried away what you do with the primers looks perfectly safe and even if it did go off (drilling like that will not set it off though) it's just a percussion cap it's not like you are drilling it while it's on a loaded rifle lol
@thebotrchap3 жыл бұрын
Agreed, popping an unconstrained percussion primer is just like a big cap gun cap going off. I’ve done it many times when experimenting with their sensitivity. They need the fire channel of a nipple to concentrate the heat, otherwise you just get a bang and a small puff of moderate heat. Modern primers are however on a different power level and are extremely dangerous should they go off, even unconstrained.
@amcconnell67305 жыл бұрын
Rather than use the hammer to vibrate the powder, place the end of a metal (or wood, I suppose) rule under the powder packing block, with the other end projecting over the edge of the table, and "strum" the free end of the rule to vibrate the container.
@chomocharlie39972 жыл бұрын
11:11, "Paper does beat scissors in the end." Hear! Hear!
@nejiniisan12655 жыл бұрын
Excellent. But why don't you glue the silk all around the cartridge?
@thebotrchap5 жыл бұрын
Neji Niisan Because I’m reproducing the cartridge followings period instructions and it says to glue the overlap only.
@nejiniisan12655 жыл бұрын
@@thebotrchap, thanks. I wonder if you glue all around it would maker the cartridge stiffer. Wonderful cartridges, btw.
@thebotrchap5 жыл бұрын
Neji Niisan Thanks. I think there was a delicate balance at play. It they made the cartridge too rigid, it would hinder the swirling of the debris to clear the chamber. None of the big four needle rifle types have rigid cartridge walls. I have tested these cartridges since and they all ignite just fine, even when slamming the bolt into them when forcing them in a dirty chamber. The compressed powder provides all the column strength necessary. The only thing I will change will be to use a thicker latex seal at the base as I kept getting little bits of seal being blown into the needle channel of the bolt head making recocking very stiff.
@nejiniisan12655 жыл бұрын
@@thebotrchap, thanks a lot for the explanations! I had never seen a needle rifle before, I found it to be very nice.
@linkbond085 жыл бұрын
I though reloading 30.06 with a Lee Classic loader took a long time, I was wrong... This takes a long time. This is 30 minutes per round holy smokes!!
@BlokeontheRange5 жыл бұрын
You don't have to explain to camera what you're doing for every round ;) It's a number of minutes per round, certainly, but if you batch the operations it goes much quicker.
@Jagdtyger2A2 жыл бұрын
Have you considered using nitrated cartridge paper seales with nitrocellulose based fingernail polish as water proofing? If it works, and it should, it would make a stronger stiffer water proof cartridge for shooting in all weather and climates. what do you think?
@thebotrchap2 жыл бұрын
No, but I’m strictly adhering to the traditional method. By all means try it out.
@felixthecat2653 жыл бұрын
I think a drop tube would be a more consistent way of compacting the charge.. Wellying the side of the die clearly works, but is hardly reproduceable.. ?
@pikeywyatt5 жыл бұрын
so much better than blue peter. thanks
@johnstacy79025 жыл бұрын
How hard would it be to make a cardboard tube and shotgun primers. ALos a hollow base bullet? still I really enjoyed the video
@thebotrchap5 жыл бұрын
John Stacy In theory, not too difficult, however shotgun primers are fairly bulky and there is a high chance that a spent primer would wedge itself in the bore. There is a CF conversion kit available though which has a replacement bolt head and firing pin.
@shermonruler5 жыл бұрын
didn't you guys get in trouble for a video on remaking old ammo?
@BlokeontheRange5 жыл бұрын
Yup, but the bots seem to have softened in the meantime so we're taking the risk and being careful with our descriptions etc.
@ChodaStanks4 жыл бұрын
Which one, 2F or 3F is better for the Chassepot?
@thebotrchap4 жыл бұрын
Just My Name Doesn’t really make any difference.
@EdAtoZ3 жыл бұрын
Question, what happens to the primer ? Does it exit out the barrel ?
@BlokeontheRange3 жыл бұрын
Yes. There's a donut-shaped void in the chamber behind the seated cartridge, so you end up with pressure behind the primer which forces it out the front.
@EdAtoZ3 жыл бұрын
@@BlokeontheRange With my muzzle loaders, when I use patch and ball I can find the patch after firing. Does the same thing happen with the paper ?
@BlokeontheRange3 жыл бұрын
@@EdAtoZ Confetti
@thebotrchap3 жыл бұрын
@@EdAtoZ There is always a bit of residue in the chamber which will eventually build up enough to hamper chambering a cartridge.
@EdAtoZ3 жыл бұрын
@@thebotrchap Maybe change the heavy and waxed paper, for something better, Flashpaper ! That way you have no residue and it guaranties ignition in or out of the gun ! (just joking) Do you have videos on French muzzle loader carriages ?
@Jean-FrancoisPREVOT Жыл бұрын
Je mets un peu de pulvérin dans l'amorce avant de coller la rondelle, cela améliore l'inflammation de la poudre. Merci pour tes videos.
@liamclarke11965 жыл бұрын
Hi bloke I have a Chassepot/gras farm gun I need some spear parts I can't find any for sale in the UK do u know where I can find someone who sells them cheers and nice vid
@thebotrchap5 жыл бұрын
liam clarke If you can work or translate in French then NaturaBuy is your best bet.
@liamclarke11965 жыл бұрын
@@thebotrchap cheers mate thank you
@General.Longstreet5 жыл бұрын
I believe women and children were employed to make paper cartridges as they have more nimble delicate fingers.
@thebotrchap5 жыл бұрын
Colonel Ed Yes indeed.
@jacqueslemiere4 жыл бұрын
very good french pronunciation.
@BlokeontheRange4 жыл бұрын
I'd be worried if it wasn't, cos he is French ;)
@jacqueslemiere4 жыл бұрын
@@BlokeontheRange i am french too i am not able to speak that well
@kpadmirer3 жыл бұрын
I can just see some poilus sitting around a campfire making a few thousands of these things. Zut alors!
@curtwuollet29122 жыл бұрын
And we complain about the cost per shot today. Can you imagine what these would cost today done by hand?
@konradwidget69566 жыл бұрын
Will there be a French version? I was joking.
@bikerdave191482 жыл бұрын
I'm betting the debris left over would be a lot less if you nitrated the paper first, maybe use something like coffee filter paper
@thebotrchap2 жыл бұрын
The original cartridge was not nitrated so neither is this one since aim here is to reproduce the original pattern. I made some nitrated ones years ago and there was no significant improvement in chamber fouling. The thick bubble tea straw versions as shown on our Utreon channel produce the least fouling of all.
@randyhavard60842 жыл бұрын
Ian from forgotten weapons says it best "the French copy no one, and no one copies the French"
@presidentlouis-napoleonbon88895 жыл бұрын
How would those be made in factories? During the real war?
@BlokeontheRange5 жыл бұрын
By people sitting at tables doing one or 2 operations each.
@thebotrchap5 жыл бұрын
Like Bloke said, almost every step was performed by a different person so production was quite high and didn’t require complex machinery or highly trained workers. Period photographs often show women and children at work.
@judofry5 жыл бұрын
Today he is making weird combustible mummy fingers
@TheWozWizard5 жыл бұрын
It was obsolete even before it was adopted!
@Kevinkapon3 жыл бұрын
The .41 Swiss was about equal in power to the Chassepot, actually.
@JenniferinIllinois5 жыл бұрын
Hmm, so why did the self contained metallic cartridge become a thing? Oh right, I just watched the video. Hehehe... Definitely a lot of work to make one paper cartridge.
@kirkstinson73164 жыл бұрын
No mention of the fact that this ammo is based on the Drieser needle gun ammo that predates it by (I think) 15 years?
@thebotrchap4 жыл бұрын
kirk stinson The Dreyse predates it by 25 years but the ammunition has little in common aside from the fact that it has a bullet and powder. The Chassepot cartridge is basically a modern CF cartridge with a paper case. The Dreyse has a sub caliber bullet in a sabot with the primer at the base of the sabot ahead of the primer. Very different beast indeed!
@BlokeontheRange4 жыл бұрын
Chassepot cartriged are waaaay more advanced than Dreyse ones :)
@DarthTrazyn5 жыл бұрын
Prussia was supposed to have had one of the most powerful militaries of the late 1800s, was that due to the use of the Dreyse system? or were there other factors in play that made them so powerful? beyond using the dreyse system...
@thebotrchap5 жыл бұрын
Braidborn The Dreyse was a factor up to a point but as was very efficient logistics and state of the art artillery with well tried and tested tactics to put it to good use. The Prussian states had been warring on and off for half a century internally in the unification wars an externally with Denmark and Austria.
@merlemorrison4825 жыл бұрын
makes me wonder how they ever managed to mass produce these!!!
@thebotrchap5 жыл бұрын
Merle Morrison Quite easily, that was kind of the point. Labour was cheap back then. You could train an unskilled workforce to perform small incremental steps of the loading process, a bit like a precursor of a chain production. One group rolls tubes, another applies the bases and primers, another fills with powder etc.
@ralphwatten24263 жыл бұрын
I wonder if soldiers would be doing this on bivouac during their hours of boredom.
@BlokeontheRange3 жыл бұрын
Nope. Factory-made. Too complicated and fiddly and function-critical to be soldier-made.
@blancsteve48195 жыл бұрын
Seems like a lot of work for some soppy solder to let them get wet in the field.
@thebotrchap5 жыл бұрын
Blank Steve They were packaged in waterproofed card boxes of 9 rounds
@doomsayer79375 жыл бұрын
Talk about a pain in the ass. It would take 6 months to get a box of shells. And I load some odd cartridges.
@Landrew0 Жыл бұрын
It's hard if you haven't rehearsed or made notes.
@vanoknt3 жыл бұрын
i heard somewhere that ATF ruled that this a full semi automatic machine gun. and it is illegal to buy it in CA.
@wastedangelematis5 жыл бұрын
Cartridge looks like cuban cigar, Or worse... XD
@rikuurufu55345 жыл бұрын
That's way more than half a milimeter, good sir.
@CheshireTomcat685 жыл бұрын
Oops, your adverts have disappeared from earlier!
@CheshireTomcat685 жыл бұрын
Tried again, got 2 ads! I like how you say tightening the string is THE fiddly bit!
@thebotrchap5 жыл бұрын
CheshireTomcat68 It’s the bit that requires the most dexterity, the rest just requires a patient methodical approach.
@skorpius7524 жыл бұрын
Ever hear of friction? Oh, well, when you are picking pieces of brass out of your body, you'll learn. Man, if you had any idea how bad that hurts, you wouldn't be drilling your primers. If you continue to use this method, build a jig so that if the cap ignites, it cannot project shrapnel into your body. An alternative would be to cut the sides of the cap with diagonal cutters, which is arguably safer. At least that is easy to shield. For settling your powder, you could try an ultrasonic cleaner. But I would do a test with a primer to make sure it will not set them off... Even in the 1800s, when safety was nonexistent, they were smart enough not to compress powder onto a primer!
@thebotrchap4 жыл бұрын
Friction? Nope sorry never heard of it 🙄 I did say it would scare some people, hence you should assume I’m very well aware of the danger. The amplitude of my ultrasonic cleaner is too great, powder sprays everywhere.
@skorpius7524 жыл бұрын
@@thebotrchap So get a Hitachi vibrator and use that. You might want to use it on yourself whilst at it. You seem like you could use it. As for the safety issue, I don't think you did due diligence explaining the risk for the benefit of the not so clever people who are getting ideas from you. "Because the Russians did it" is never a smart rationale for doing anything!
@thebotrchap4 жыл бұрын
Skorpius has a sting in his tail 😏Sorry but I was brought up in a world were common sense was paramount. If people need obviously dangerous situations explained in large friendly letters then they should remain in their cosy bubble wrap cocoons and stay away from pointy things and loud noises. Obviously the Russians would have produced the holes in the priming cup blank before forming and filling with compound, it’s common sense. I’m drilling parallel to the compound, 5mm above it with a pin drill at 2 rpm with the compound being covered as standard with a paper foil. Btw these brass cups do not explode then set off unconstrained, they just pop with a puff of smoke like a toy cap (yes I have tried it).
@curiouscat83963 ай бұрын
If the primer was in the base, then why was the needle so long!? Wot, was it a friction primer, like in der German potato masher grenade? Oh, no. It was put in backwards, and the needle had to puncture the front!?
@BlokeontheRange3 ай бұрын
Needs to be up there to get reliably blown out of the barrel
@thebotrchap3 ай бұрын
The primer is basically a backwards percussion cap in the base. The needle goes through the base of the cartridge just far enough to strike the base of the cap so about 10mm from the bolt face. Yes, ignition is by the friction caused by the needle punching through the compound.
@curiouscat83963 ай бұрын
@@BlokeontheRange Wasn't that the job of the air pocket? I meant why does the needle protrude so much? Oh, I see: It pushes the primer forwards!? U're right: The charge isn't hot enough, to melt it! I must watch it firing in slo-mo, to try to see what comes out?
@curiouscat83963 ай бұрын
@@thebotrchap 10mm U reckon? That looked to me to be much longer. Must take another look.
@curiouscat83963 ай бұрын
@@thebotrchap U are right: I just saw an image of a fully assembled bolt and the needle protrudes at most 10mm!
@markboland25454 жыл бұрын
There's gotta be a faster more economical method...ie the star paper etc
@thebotrchap4 жыл бұрын
There are many ways to make simpler functional cartridges. I’ve even shown one in another vid. That wasn’t the point of this vid though. This was about recreating a faithful reproduction of the original cartridge.
@RUSTYCHEVYTRUCK4 жыл бұрын
Ian McCollum wants to know your location
@GrumpyGenXGramps3 жыл бұрын
Looks like you are shooting a poorly rolled cigar! LOL