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- Newsgroups: rec.org.sca
- Path: sparky!uunet!spool.mu.edu!umn.edu!staff.tc.umn.edu!rgeorge
- From: rgeorge@staff.tc.umn.edu (Rogers George)
- Subject: Re: period firearms
- Message-ID: <1993Jan1.003751.12432@news2.cis.umn.edu>
- Sender: news@news2.cis.umn.edu (Usenet News Administration)
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- Organization: University of Minnesota
- References: <9212301802.AA04380@math.bu.edu> <viking.725781379@vincent2.iastate.edu>
- Date: Fri, 1 Jan 1993 00:37:51 GMT
- Lines: 39
-
- I've been quietly following this thread since its inception, and am curious
- about an aspect of period firearm use: at what point were royalty or other
- vip's given firearm salutes, either with cannon or smaller arms?
-
- If such a practice is period, it could remove the risks of some* firearm
- use at events, if, for example, ONLY blanks were fired, ONLY by those specially
- trained / appointed for the purpose, and only as a showy salute to visiting
- royals or peers. Such use, of course, would be predicated on the chosen
- period of those being saluted; for early-period monarchs, it wouldn't fit at
- all. For kings with far eastern personas, maybe some small (mundanely legal,
- whatever that entails) fireworks would be an impressive sight.
-
- The concern with exploding breeches being, unfortunately, all too period,
- reminds me of a concern of those who restore old cars. To restore a 40's
- (I think) car to its original state involves using cloth-insulated wires,
- something that's now recognized as a fire hazard. The compromise accepted
- by vintage car clubs was to use normal wire disguised to look like cloth
- insulation. Handguns in the SCA may have to undergo a similar 'disguise':
- since truly period handguns explode occasionally, semi-modern techniques
- may have to be used in gunsmithing, and then disguised somehow to look
- like a period weapon.
-
- one possible technique.. for the aforementioned cannon salutes, it may be
- possible to construct a cannon that looks extremely* period, even early
- period (wooden barrel and everything) that conceals some kind of carbide
- "cannon" inside. For those who've never seen these toys, they are designed
- to ignite a small amount of acetylene gas, firing nothing, posing no great
- fire or explosion hazard (there is no acetylene tank, it's generated by a
- reaction between water and .... calcium carbide? I'm probably wrong here.)
- and generating one heck of a resounding bang. Very impressive, very period
- looking, and nobody but the cannoneers need to know the anachronism that
- makes it work.
-
- But these are just a few meandering thoughts... I'm no expert on any of this,
- least of all the SCA itself (I've been a member for ~6 months.)
-
- Rogers George
- rgeorge@epx.cis.umn.edu
-
-