The Perils of Hand Loading and How to Wrap Bullets

D. & J. Fraser of Edinburgh introduced their falling block match rifle in 1881. The rifle was tried by several Scottish riflemen in the selection shoots for the Scottish Eight to compete for the Elcho Shield. The rifle gained popularity and six of the Scottish Eight eventually competed using the Fraser rifle that year. Management of the breech loading match rifle was still new to some at the time, the muzzle loader long being favoured despite the success of the American Teams using breech loaders in long range international competition since 1874. The perils of hand loading were still being discovered.

Manufacture of The Copper Percussion Cap

The manufacture of percussion-caps. The first process in this light and delicate work is the stamping of sheet-copper into pieces of the required form to make the caps. For this purpose the copper is placed beneath the punch of the machine, and immediately it is put into action, small crosses of metal are seen to fall from it into a box in a continual stream, whilst the sheet itself is transposed by the punching process into a kind of trellis work.

Rigby, Quicksilver & Bullet Alloys

For a period during the 1870s long range target shooting captivated the public and much coverage of the sport was given by the press. Some reports referred to technical detail and this article includes contemporary comment from the 1870s on bullet alloys and in particular the use of quicksilver (mercury) as a bullet-hardener.

Ammunition

INDEX. Gunpowder, projectiles, history of the cartridge from paper tube to solid-drawn case. Contemporary information on loading.