• 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

Recommend a book about technical aspects of flintlock arms and basic tools

Muzzleloading Forum

Help Support Muzzleloading Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
Joined
Aug 30, 2023
Messages
70
Reaction score
57
Location
Germany
Like the title suggests I‘m looking for a good book that discusses the technical aspects and the proper care for flintlock muskets, rifles and pistols. Gunsmith ABCs/101.

Also can you make a recommendation for the basic tools for flintlock guns?

Thanks!
 
Go to the NMLRA web site and look for Eric Bye's book, "Flintlocks, Their Use and Application ". It's well worth the $33.

As far as flintlock tools, you need the basic tools for any traditional muzzleloader.
Working rod of brass or stainless steel with muzzle guard and jag of appropriate size for the barrel.
Ball puller and patch puller.
Volumetric powder measure 10 to 120 grains powder.
Powder flask to dispense powder.
Lead balls of a caliber for your rifle.
Cotton patching for round ball of approximately 0.015 to 0.018.
Patch lubricant (from spit to exotic oils and greases.
Short starter
Patch knife if patches are to be cut at the muzzle.

Specifically for flintlocks:
Black Powder probably 3Fg. Don't waste time trying to get the synthetic powders to work. The 3Fg powder will be acceptable as pan powder. Uses the measure to pour the pan half full. No need for a special pan primer just yet.
Tooth picks or bamboo skewers to plug the touch hole for cleaning. A rare-earth disc magnet with an electrical tape gasket will work also.
A touch hole pick to keep the touch hole open.
Rags to keep the pan clean.
Larry Callahan's flinters tool. It has properly hardened and sized blades to turn screws and bolts. A vent pick and knapping notch.
A hammer stall, a leather cover for the frizzen to stop the flint from striking the frizzen.
Black or amber flints sized for your lock.
Optional flash guard to attach to the pan to help control the pan flash from being directed to an adjacent shooter.

Find an experienced flint lock shooter to mentor you through the learning process.

There's lots more tools, but these should get you started.

@matt48, welcome to the experience of flint lock rifle shooting.

Being in East Anglia, Germany, finding real black powder may be your biggest challenge as well as some of the tools.
 
Last edited:
Go to the NMLRA web site and look for Eric Bye's book, "Flintlocks, Their Use and Application ". It's well worth the $33.

As far as flintlock tools, you need the basic tools for any traditional muzzleloader.
Working rod of brass or stainless steel with muzzle guard and jag of appropriate size for the barrel.
Ball puller and patch puller.
Volumetric powder measure 10 to 120 grains powder.
Powder flask to dispense powder.
Lead balls of a caliber for your rifle.
Cotton patching for round ball of approximately 0.015 to 0.018.
Patch lubricant (from spit to exotic oils and greases.
Short starter
Patch knife if patches are to be cut at the muzzle.

Specifically for flintlocks:
Black Powder probably 3Fg. Don't waste time trying to get the synthetic powders to work. The 3Fg powder will be acceptable as pan powder. Uses the measure to pour the pan half full. No need for a special pan primer just yet.
Tooth picks or bamboo skewers to plug the touch hole for cleaning. A rare-earth disc magnet with an electrical tape gasket will work also.
A touch hole pick to keep the touch hole open.
Rags to keep the pan clean.
Larry Callahan's flinters tool. It has properly hardened and sized blades to turn screws and bolts. A vent pick and knapping notch.
A hammer stall, a leather cover for the frizzen to stop the flint from striking the frizzen.
Black or amber flints sized for your lock.
Optional flash guard to attach to the pan to help control the pan flash from being directed to an adjacent shooter.

Find an experienced flint lock shooter to mentor you through the learning process.

There's lots more tools, but these should get you started.

@matt48, welcome to the experience of flint lock rifle shooting.

Being in East Anglia, Germany, finding real black powder may be your biggest challenge as well as some of the tools.


Thank you!

Great recommendation on the book! The shipping is a bit steep ($95) but luckily it is available as e-book on Kindle and I am already half way into it :)
 
Being in East Anglia, Germany, finding real black powder may be your biggest challenge as well as some of the tools.

I live in East Anglia, and have no problem whatsoever in finding 'real black powder'.

However, the East Anglia that I live in is the large sticky-out bit of England. I've never heard of an East Anglia in Germany.

1693905643800.png


As the OP lives in Germany, near Munich, then negotiating the tedious path to obtaining an explosives permit for BP is just one of the numerous stumbling blocks in the way of any would-be muzzleloading shooter. He has already mentioned this in his intro thread.

PS - Brownells sell a fine set of hollow-ground turnscrews eminently suitable for use on firearms old and new. Pricey, but buy once etc.
 
Last edited:
PS - Brownells sell a fine set of hollow-ground turnscrews eminently suitable for use on firearms old and new. Pricey, but buy once etc.

Are you talking about the "Brownells" branded ones? They also have some called "Forster" and "Grace"?
 
Last edited:
According to an article by Balazs Nemeth on his excellent web site (https://capandball.com/) there are over 77,000 BP enthusiasts in Germany. There must be a few flintlock Schützen near you. Although out here in the American West "near you" can mean a three hour drive. Best of luck and let us know how you get on with your flintlock.
 

Latest posts

Back
Top