Second silver quarter in two days.

Garabaldi

Bronze Member
Jun 28, 2009
2,382
91
Detector(s) used
Whites M6, Whites Pulse Diver, ETRAC.

Attachments

  • 001.JPG
    001.JPG
    57.9 KB · Views: 475
  • 002.JPG
    002.JPG
    68.9 KB · Views: 468
  • 003.JPG
    003.JPG
    55.6 KB · Views: 466
  • 006.JPG
    006.JPG
    47.6 KB · Views: 471
  • 011.JPG
    011.JPG
    58.8 KB · Views: 468
  • 012.JPG
    012.JPG
    71.7 KB · Views: 466
  • 013.JPG
    013.JPG
    56.4 KB · Views: 469
Upvote 0
Congrats on the Barber and silver George :thumbsup:

Just a thought about that lead. . . it was often cut into
strips to wrap "gun flints" for flintlocks.
 

watercolor said:
Congrats on the Barber and silver George :thumbsup:

Just a thought about that lead. . . it was often cut into
strips to wrap "gun flints" for flintlocks.
Interesting, are you talking about the thin folded up lead?
 

augusthog said:
Outstanding finds! That 39 is looking real rough, lol
With 18" of snow on the ground this 39 is looking pretty good to me. :laughing7:
 

Garabaldi said:
watercolor said:
Congrats on the Barber and silver George :thumbsup:

Just a thought about that lead. . . it was often cut into
strips to wrap "gun flints" for flintlocks.
Interesting, are you talking about the thin folded up lead?

Yep. . . when the gun flint was wrapped, it "cushioned" the flint when it was tightened inside the upper & lower vise-jaw of the lock.
 

watercolor said:
Garabaldi said:
watercolor said:
Congrats on the Barber and silver George :thumbsup:

Just a thought about that lead. . . it was often cut into
strips to wrap "gun flints" for flintlocks.
Interesting, are you talking about the thin folded up lead?

Yep. . . when the gun flint was wrapped, it "cushioned" the flint when it was tightened inside the upper & lower vise-jaw of the lock.
Thanks watercolor, you might have solved a mystery for me. :icon_thumleft:
 

Top Member Reactions

Users who are viewing this thread

Back
Top