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Joined: Jun 2004
Posts: 349
Sidelock
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Sidelock
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Joined: Jun 2004
Posts: 349
KYJ,
I’m in the land of dial-up, so cannot access the book. A fuller was one who thickened cloth by stamping/beating it in water to which urine had been added. As a family name it is a variation on Walker and Tucker, also derived from the same trade. There is a good connection between mercury as a cure for syphilis (mixed with lard, external treatment) and the mad hatters – it was a French felt hatter who while undergoing mercury treatment produced the best felt. Thereafter mercury was added to the process (as an ingredient, not as a weight.) The “night silver” you mention is I think not mercury, and was in the form of an egg; it was “passed” down through families for several generations. Mercury could be precipitated out very easily, due to its high specific gravity.

To keep gun-related, the potassium nitrate (saltpetre) for early gunpowder also was collected from urine.

PeteM - Is honeycombing not a change in the metal structure? cast cannon suffered from it and I always believed it to occur around the touch-hole and breech areas. It is regularly mentioned in the Patrick O’Brien novels in relation to cannon.

K.

Joined: Nov 2005
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Sidelock
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K,

Quicksilver was a widely used term here for Mercury. I am familiar with it because the fumes were used to develop Daguerreotypes. It has been replaced today with the Becquerel Process because of the mercury fumes...
http://www.daguerre.org/resource/process/remin.html
http://www.indepthinfo.com/mercury/quicksilver.shtml
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mercury_(element)

As to the honeycombing. I will take your word for it. How many shotgun barrels have you seen that suffered from it?

I assumed he meant pitting because earlier he talks about wet guns and using gin. I assumed the gin was used to remove any moisture, which was also problematic with the paper hulls of the day. I could well be wrong on all counts...

Pete

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