How to Fire a Brown Bess

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  • Опубліковано 28 жов 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 32

  • @PtolemaicTaweret
    @PtolemaicTaweret 13 років тому +18

    I love the sound the musket makes.

  • @montutu
    @montutu 14 років тому +12

    Very informative, i have been tasked with learning to fire one of these for a big budget movie, and before watching this clip i knew nothing about the brown bess.
    i especially liked how the camera zoomed in so you could actually see the mechanics, unlike other clips on youtube.

  • @NoisemakerArrow
    @NoisemakerArrow 13 років тому +39

    That's "simply" how it's done.

  • @FRAGIORGIO1
    @FRAGIORGIO1 12 років тому +9

    Very interesting. I saw some of this in the Sharpe series also. As a fan of the Napoleonic War period, I have already painted some 1,700 25 mm plastic figures of British, French, Austrian, Russian, and Bavarian soldiers, and still have about 500 to go! Thanks for sharing.

  • @CraigNinten
    @CraigNinten 12 років тому +48

    slow and ineffective they were, I found these old muskets strangely beautiful and amusing.

  • @TheChristianFairy
    @TheChristianFairy 9 років тому +33

    Would the militia members in the american revolution have used a weapon like this? I just got hired on as a military interpreter at an american museum. We'll be doing firing demonstrations with various muskets and cannons. To be honest, I'm excited about my job but also a bit nervous as it involves using weapons around the general public. I just love the idea of teaching kids military history. We'll be building campfires, making tents, running the kids through different drills, letting them help us fire the cannons (that alone scares me a bit!) and in general having a lot of fun with the kids and adults that visit us!

  • @CroppyBoy1798
    @CroppyBoy1798 16 років тому +12

    Just wondering, here the guys says the musket ball is in the top of the cartridge, which you bite off and hold in your mouth, then 'spit down' the musket ball.
    I always believed the ball was in the bottom of the cartridge, once you had bitten off the top you held the cartridge by the base to prevent the ball coming out while you primed the pan and poured the powder down the ball. Then you let the ball slip from the cartridge down the ball, followed by the paper.
    What is the correct way?

  • @MajBlood
    @MajBlood 14 років тому +2

    Where can I get a brown bess musket and a British redcoat uniform?

  • @TheMetroWarrior
    @TheMetroWarrior 12 років тому +3

    i love brown bess and also flintlock

  • @Toasty278
    @Toasty278 16 років тому +2

    the gun may be old but its still cool:)

  • @MadrasArsenal
    @MadrasArsenal 9 років тому +4

    Very nice!

  • @Aenigmaa
    @Aenigmaa 15 років тому +2

    detailed and on the point.
    This is good!
    :D

  • @MrFysik
    @MrFysik 13 років тому +3

    how can u not like this? =P

  • @falcons1988
    @falcons1988 15 років тому

    Yeah that was in the first episode, "Sharpe's Rifles", where are Harper was arrested for mutiny, and got released after saving the flag of Santiago.

  • @kingsman565
    @kingsman565 13 років тому +1

    In Sharpe's Eagle they train the South Essex to load there musket's without a ramrod by tapping the butt of the gun on the ground, I wonder if that would relly work? I imagine after several shot's the barrel would be caked in powder & the ball would get stuck half-way down.

  • @awesome24712
    @awesome24712 12 років тому +1

    Very educational.

  • @Green0-3
    @Green0-3 12 років тому

    I say... what regiment is that?

  • @Hannibalate
    @Hannibalate 13 років тому +1

    Great explanation of all the steps. Minor point, I don't quite know how the videographer made this happen, but the lock (frizzen, pan, hammer etc.) flips to the gun's left side on firing. How do you flip a video image?

  • @verobe777
    @verobe777 16 років тому

    I think the India pattern Brown Bess is the most handly musket of the Napoleonic period (and the cheapest too), sorry my english.

  • @CoolKidX85
    @CoolKidX85 16 років тому

    THX !

  • @escavatoreCAT
    @escavatoreCAT 16 років тому

    Bel video/compliments, it's a very good movie.

  • @TheMexican1821
    @TheMexican1821 13 років тому

    I do not know why but I prefer this British Uniform over the one from the 18th century I like the Napoleonic war uniforms the new hats, and pants

  • @MrThePsychologist
    @MrThePsychologist 13 років тому

    can anybody help me pls where can i find a hat like this

  • @wojsport
    @wojsport 15 років тому +1

    good drill british soldier

  • @05Rudey
    @05Rudey 12 років тому

    Brown bess.....The gun has a very cool name.

  • @ImperialGuard322nd
    @ImperialGuard322nd 16 років тому

    but that would mean more weight, and trust me when you are marching somewhere around 20 miles in a day, the less you carry, the better.

  • @robbieatvic
    @robbieatvic 12 років тому

    awesome, but the idea of standing there in the tens of thousands and pooring fire on each other in a some what orderly fashion seems madeness. I wonder how much longer it takes to reload the bess lying on the ground? You should do a clip on that Kevin.

  • @Thelucasso2
    @Thelucasso2 12 років тому

    What an amazing gun, It would be horrible if you missed even a shot lol.

  • @rangerwayne57
    @rangerwayne57 11 років тому

    overall it was a nice informative post. but you ram once , it is not a butter churn!

  • @rebeljack9103
    @rebeljack9103 11 років тому +1

    Thank you for the vid. I watched this over and over before I bought my first flintlock! People who watch this will have more appreciation for old school marksmanship. PREPARE TO FIRE!!!! POOOOFFFFF!

  • @gekiryudojo
    @gekiryudojo 16 років тому

    very interesting!