• This community needs YOUR help today. We rely 100% on Supporting Memberships to fund our efforts. With the ever increasing fees of everything, we need help. We need more Supporting Members, today. Please invest back into this community. I will ship a few decals too in addition to all the account perks you get.



    Sign up here: https://www.muzzleloadingforum.com/account/upgrades
  • Friends, our 2nd Amendment rights are always under attack and the NRA has been a constant for decades in helping fight that fight.

    We have partnered with the NRA to offer you a discount on membership and Muzzleloading Forum gets a small percentage too of each membership, so you are supporting both the NRA and us.

    Use this link to sign up please; https://membership.nra.org/recruiters/join/XR045103

Chainfires - the skinny? Maybe....

Muzzleloading Forum

Help Support Muzzleloading Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
Chainfires were part of the evolution of Cap and Ball revolvers. Like it it was meant to be. That's why we now have Cartridge weapons. Remember 1836 to 1876 is a short time to deal with the problem. Now we have an endless debate over front or back for something that wasn't really mentioned that much in history. There are two types of shooters, those who have had a chainfire and those who lie about it

Interesting..., I thought that cartridges were developed to improve all weather capability, and to speed and make even easier reloading.


LD
 
Chainfires were part of the evolution of Cap and Ball revolvers. Like it it was meant to be. That's why we now have Cartridge weapons. Remember 1836 to 1876 is a short time to deal with the problem. Now we have an endless debate over front or back for something that wasn't really mentioned that much in history. There are two types of shooters, those who have had a chainfire and those who lie about it
Chainfires are an unintended consequence. Chainfires have nothing to do with the development of cartridges. If chainfires were such a big problem they would have been mentioned many times in historical writings. Have never seen it mentioned. As for two types of shooters. Nonsense! I have never had one and know others who have never had one.
 
Last edited:
And not once in this thread has anyone discussed improper nipple length causing chain fires....
 
Evidence and physics are the best foundations for an opinion. If the physics don't support a nipple-end caused chain fire, and if multiple experiments on chain fires can only duplicate them from the front, then there is little foundation to support the idea that a chain fire can come from the rear.

All we have right now is "if x, y, and z align properly, then a chain fire could come from the rear. No one has ever caused a chain fire to happen from the rear with any deliberate, duplicatable results, but people have duplicated results with chain fires from the front.

The idea of a chain fire from the rear is a neat idea, but it's based all on untested hypotheticals that violate the laws of physics.

View attachment 251519
I took this experiment a bit further. After 30 balls fired in this manner with no chain fire I filled the nipples from the rear with 4f, another 30 rounds and no chain fire. I went further, smeared a bit of lube {beeswax and tallow) around the nipple and impregnated it with 4f, 30 rounds, no chain fire. So I figured May be is the gun design, it was a NMA. So I conducted the same with a Colt 1860. Same results. Now, I don’t shoot sloppy guns with improper nipples, springs, light hammers, etc. I only used .457 PRBs, Schuetzen 3F, RWS 1075 cpas and home made lube. Half a day shooting, two guns, 180 balls and caps, half a pound of powder later, no chain fire.
 
Interesting..., I thought that cartridges were developed to improve all weather capability, and to speed and make even easier reloading.

LD
True as paper and then copper cases were developed while still using black powder as the propellant. Brass cases (copper and zinc ) came along in the semi-smokeless and then smokeless powder era.
Higher pressures of smokeless powder could not be sealed with the percussion system of ignition. This was probably the main driving force of metallic cartridge evolution.
 
Four pages of input on this subject so far and many reasons postulated and a few insults posted, so here is my theory. It has happened three times to me in the span of 40 years of shooting. Since no one has mentioned it yet, mine occurred during a new moon. So, perhaps the combined gravitational pull of the sun and moon had something to do with it. Just my two cents.
 
This is a good thread. It's the first really dedicated discussion of whether chain fires come from the front or back, rather than just a bunch of individual anecdotes that don't elaborate on any theories.
 
Gotta agree with test results. A longtime forum member on other forums did the same test ( years ago) with only the nipple capped that was being fired. No chain fire.
So, I have to go with the conclusion that chain fires come from the front because of chambers out of roud or ill fitting balls / conicals.

As far as weak main springs, a cap post alleviates that problem. A cap hull can't push a hammer back further than the post.

Mike
 
Gotta agree with test results. A longtime forum member on other forums did the same test ( years ago) with only the nipple capped that was being fired. No chain fire.
So, I have to go with the conclusion that chain fires come from the front because of chambers out of roud or ill fitting balls / conicals.

As far as weak main springs, a cap post alleviates that problem. A cap hull can't push a hammer back further than the post.

Mike
if it has a post or shield. otherwise the cap pieces can go down into the works.
Do not ask me how I know. Experience gained from three complete tear downs for five shots.
Bunk
 
if it has a post or shield. otherwise the cap pieces can go down into the works.
Do not ask me how I know. Experience gained from three complete tear downs for five shots.
Bunk
That is so weird to hear as in 50 years of shooting open and solid frame percussion guns competitively have I ever had a spent cap fall into the action from the hammer mortise and tie the gun up or had a chain fire ! These are formal 30 and 40 shot for score target matches and with sighters one will usually send 40-50 balls down range per month.
I have had spent caps jamb up between the recoil shield an nipple pocket on rare occasions and with the flick of a knife point or screw driver was back in business but other than that minor inconvenience no trouble at all.
Mostly I shoot a 58 Pietta, ROA, 60 Pietta and several single shot match pistols which have all been tuned up well and had some new parts made for them (triggers, wedge and springs).
I can't say I have ever seen any of the folks I compete with have a gun made inoperable by a spent cap down in the action either.
I have to guess that some models of percussion guns are far more susceptible to this malfunction than any I have ever shot in great numbers.
 
Last edited:
Back
Top