Snaplock

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A Snaplock is a particular type of mechanism for firing a gun (also, a gun fired by such a mechanism).

A snaplock ignites the (usually muzzleloading) weapon's propellent by means of sparks produced when a spring-powered cock strikes a flint down on to a piece of hardened steel. The snaplock is therefore similar to the snaphaunce (sometimes classed as an advanced type of snaplock) and the later flintlock (see below).

In all snaplocks, the flint is held in a clamp at the end of a bent lever called the cock. When the gun is "cocked", the cock is held back, against the pressure of a spring, by a catch which is part of the trigger mechanism. When the trigger is pulled, the catch is released and the spring moves the cock rapidly forwards. The flint strikes a curved plate of hardened steel, called the "steel". The flint strikes from the steel a shower of white hot steel shavings (sparks) which fall towards the priming powder held in the flash pan. The flash from the pan's ignited primer travels (unless there is only a "flash in the pan") through the touch hole into the firing chamber at the rear of the barrel, and ignites the main charge of gunpowder.

Before the weapon is fired, the pan has a closed cover: the mechanism for opening this cover (ie manual or automatic) can affect whether the weapon is classed as a snaplock. In fact, the term Snaplock may be used in three ways

  • The most general use of Snaplock is for any lock which strikes flint against steel but which does not have the defining feature of a true flintlock. This is the frizzen, a single piece of metal which is a combined "steel" and self-opening pan cover.
  • A more restrictive definintion excludes the "snaphaunce", more sophisticated weapons with a lateral sear and a pan cover that opens automatically - like the flintlock (although in a snaphaunce, the pan cover is separate from the steel).
  • Sometimes the term is used only for specific Scandinavian, German, and Russian varieties of lock.

Contents

Period of Use

The snaplock first appeared in the late 1540s, probably in southern Germany. It was cheap and easy to produce, and like all post-matchlock weapons, could be primed and loaded in advance and be fired at a moment's notice. It was used until modern times in Scandinavia and Russia, but by about 1640 it was out of fashion almost everywhere else, with a reputation for being a crude and unsafe peasant's weapon.

Safety

Snaplocks as a class did not have safety devices, but individual models could be prevented from inadvertent firing by different mechanisms

  • In the early models with a manual pan cover, the steel could be swung out of the path of the flint until just before firing., also, a closed pan cover would not allow the primer to ignite and could help keep the primer dry in misty conditions.
  • On some models, an external hook attached to the lock plate could engage the tip of the "cocked" cock to prevent it from moving forwards.

Regional varieties include the Baltic Lock, the Russian Snaplock, the Roman Lock, and the Spanish Snaplock or Agujeta Lock, precursor to the Miquelet patilla lock. The Swedish king Gustavus Adolphus had many matchlock muskets converted to snaplocks during his military reforms.

See also

References

  • Blair, Claude. Editor. Pollard's History of Firearms. New York: MacMillian, 1983
  • Graells, Eudaldo. "A Primer of Ripoll Gunlocks" in Arms and Armor Annual, Vol.I R. Held, Editor. Northfield, IL: DBI Books, 1973
  • Held, Robert. The Age of Firearms. Second Revised Edition. Northfield,IL: DBI Books, 1970
  • Lavin, James D. A History of Spanish Firearms. London: Herbert Jenkins, 1965
  • Lavin, James D. "Spanish Agujeta-Lock Firearms" in Art, Arms, and Armour: An International Anthology, Vol. I: 1979-80. R.Held, Editor. Switzerland: Acquafresca Editrice, 1979
  • Neal, W. Keith. Spanish Guns and Pistols. London: Bell, 1955

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