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The gunsmith's manual

Chapter 29: CHAPTER XXIX. NOMENCLATURE.
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About This Book

A practical handbook provides comprehensive, step-by-step instruction for gunsmithing, combining a concise history of firearms with detailed guidance on making and repairing barrels, locks, stocks, and pistols. It catalogues necessary tools, shop layout, and methods for fabricating, tempering, and finishing metal and wood parts, including case-hardening, rifling, browning, and varnishing techniques. Chapters explain disassembly, cleaning, assembly, chambering, and breech work, and present recipes, measurements, and nomenclature for parts. Emphasis is on hands-on procedures, toolmaking, and maintenance to enable both novices and experienced workers to perform safe, accurate gunsmithing tasks.

CHAPTER XXIX.
NOMENCLATURE.

Figure 76.

Figure 77.

Nomenclature of the Gun Stock.Fig. 76 shows a gun stock with the locks, plates and other metal portions removed, a, is the butt; b, the small or handle; c, the head; d, the bump; e, the comb; f, the toe; g, lock-bed; h, fore-end or fore-arm; i, pistol-grip; k, cap or end of pistol-grip; l, tip of fore-end; m, escutcheons; n, mortice for bolt; o, chequering.

Figure 78.

Figure 79.

Nomenclature of the Gun Lock.—The number of pieces in a common gun lock, as shown, are thirteen, and are fully illustrated in the cut, Fig. 77. A, is the lock-plate; B, the hammer; C, mainspring; D, the bridle; E, the tumbler; F, the sear; G, the sear-spring; H, the swivel or stirrup; I, the sear-spring screw; K, K, K, the bridle screws; L, hole for side-screw. In some locks there are only two bridle screws. In others a screw holds the mainspring to place instead of a lip catching under the stud.

Figure 80.

Figure 81.

Nomenclature of the Hammer.—The names of different parts of the hammer, Fig. 78, are: a, the body; b, the head; c, the comb; d, the nose; e, the cup; f, tumbler-hole.

Figure 82.

Nomenclature of the Lock-Plate.—The names of different portions of the lock-plate, Fig. 79, are: a, the bolster; b, mainspring-catch; c, hole for mainspring-pivot; d, hole for side-screw; e, hole for arbor of tumbler; f, hole for sear-screw; g, hole for sear spring-screw; h, slot for sear-spring stud; i, i, holes for bridle screws.

Figure 83.

Figure 84.

Nomenclature of the Tumbler.—The names of the tumbler, Fig. 80, are: a, the body; b, arbor; c, squares; d, pivot; e, swivel arm; f, pin-hole, and g, the tumbler-screw hole.

Nomenclature of the Bridle.—The bridle, Fig. 81, consists of: a, the body; b, the eye for tumbler-pivot; c, hole for sear-screw; d, d, holes for bridle screws. Some tumblers have a pin that goes in a hole in the lock-plate, and this pin is called a pivot.

Figure 85.

Nomenclature of the Mainspring.—The mainspring, Fig. 82, consists of: a, the upper branch; b, the lower branch; c, the hook; d, the pivot; e, the catch which is sometimes called the tang.

Figure 86.

Nomenclature of the Sear.—The sear, Fig. 83, consists of: a, the body; b, the nose; c, the arm; d, screw-hole.

Nomenclature of the Sear-Spring.—The sear-spring, Fig. 84, consists of: a, the blade; b, upper branch; c, lower branch; d, the stud; e, screw-hole.

Nomenclature of the Swivel.—The mainspring-swivel or stirrup, Fig. 85, consists of: a, the body; b, the axis; and c, the tumbler-pin hole.

Nomenclature of the Breech-Pin.Fig. 86 shows full size of musket-barrel breech-pin. a, plug with threads; b, tenon; c, tang; d, tang-screw hole; e, face.

In sporting guns the tang is often called the “strap,” and is distinguished as long and short. The length varying from two and a half inches as shortest, and five inches as the longest. Sometimes the term “tail” is employed instead of tang or strap. The diameter of the plug is generally one-half, five-eighths, and three-quarters of an inch. The diameter of the pin used in United States muskets and rifles is three-quarters of an inch.

Nomenclature of Screws.—In all the screws, the parts are the stem, the head, the slot and the thread.