The Firearm Blog's recent pieces on early "high capacity" repeaters had a picture of a Miegs rifle which, while interesting, would be no more than an extremely rare prototypical footnote if it hadn't obviously influenced the later rifles built by the Evans Repeating Rifle Company out of Maine, which were a qualified commercial success.
The Evans were manufactured from 1873 to 1879, and roughly fifteen thousand of the helical-magazine repeaters found buyers during that stretch of time, and were even endorsed by "Buffalo Bill". As a result, they're not terribly uncommon at gun shows today if you know where to look, and while premium examples bring premium prices, serviceable shooters can be had for well under a grand. The .44 Evans cartridge hasn't been commercially loaded for almost a hundred years, but the black powder rounds can be formed by cutting down .303 Savage brass.
Of course, "high capacity" is relative to the time and place: While the user of a later Evans, which due to its longer cartridges held six fewer rounds than the early models, had twenty-eight times as many rounds on tap as a contemporary U.S. soldier (who used a "Trapdoor" Springfield), he only had twice the magazine capacity of a Swiss private armed with a Gew. 1869 Vetterli.
Cool! I've been thinking that a helical mag would be a good way to deal with rimmed cartridges. This reminds me of an idea I had for a helical mag fed semi-auto .44 magnum.
ReplyDeleteI wonder if blueprints are available anywhere. It'd be cool to make one of these out of modern materials in a more modern cartridge. (Read: "Something you can buy in stores.") :)
Y'know, in my copious spare time... ;)
"Joe, why do you shoot that old Evans?"
ReplyDelete"Because it holds 28 bullets--and I ain't a very good rifle shot."
How about another post? Pretty please with .32 rimfire on top?
ReplyDeleteHas this blog expired?
ReplyDeleteNo, it's just on one of its occasional short hiatuses. (Hiatii?)
ReplyDeleteThe bottleneck right now is photographic in nature more than anything else.
Cut dowm .303 Savage brass? Horrors! Winchester's last run was 15 years ago!
ReplyDeleteMy little '99 takedown loves it's factory brass, and weeps at the thought of it's being used in such a barbarous way.
On helical mag systems, go check out the Calico rifle. This is a modern design semi-auto rifle/pistol/submachine gun system that uses helical mags that hold 50 or 100 rounds in 9mm luger, among other "actually available in stores" cartridges/calibers.
ReplyDelete