If the barrel has rifling, it should work, more or less. You wouldn't be shooting beyond a few dozen meters at the very max with a thing like that anyway.
If the barrel has rifling, it should work, more or less. You wouldn't be shooting beyond a few dozen meters at the very max with a thing like that anyway.
Question: flintlock can't be opened like shotgun. It was front-feed. Most, if not all bullet casings has little protrusions on the back where they was held during firing. How can you jam a bullet, which projectile needed to tight-fit the rifling in the barrel to reach the firing hammer? Flintlocks didn't even have a firing hammer like those of revolvers, they have a piece of flint which cocked to strike iron, providing spark which ignites the gunpowder in the barrel.
Fun fact: paper "shells". I think it was the French military who invented these paper cartridges, which held a bullet, a measure of gunpowder, and could be used as the choke once the bullet and gunpowder were poured/dropped into the barrel. What she's holding in her mouth might be something like that.
Fun fact: paper "shells". I think it was the French military who invented these paper cartridges, which held a bullet, a measure of gunpowder, and could be used as the choke once the bullet and gunpowder were poured/dropped into the barrel. What she's holding in her mouth might be something like that.
Oh, almost forgot about this one. That could work...