Copper.
gun shop, gun show.
Flint lock fire arms Match lock came before the Flint lock
Flint is used to produce sparks to ignite powder.
1812
Black gunpowder used in muskets and cannon contains sulfur. When it burns, the smoke smells like sulfur (stinks like eggs)
i have a muzzle loader with the marking on it that says c28 jb made in Spain sn42834 hammer looks like a flint lock that hols a nipple type cap what type of gun is this and does it have and value
Yes, they had guns and cannon. They were a flint lock gun, but the Inca didn't have the advantages of weapons like guns.
A flintlock gun needs a piece of flint, a piece of steel, and a place for the sparks to touch the gunpowder. One should use the "flint and steel" approach to create a spark that lights the gunpowder.
you put iron in the bottom slot and gravel for 25% gunpowder or flint for 100% gunpowder
I think you are asking about flintlock guns. They fire by a bit of flint rock scrapng on steel, and making sparks.
There is no such English word as "weaponds". Fighting men from both England and America used flint-lock muzzle loading muskets (smoothbore, like a shotgun), and flint-lock muzzle loading rifles (rifles have spiral grooves inside the gun's bore...called "rifling", hence the word "rifle"). The flint-lock used flint to strike a metal piece when the trigger was pulled, which created a spark, which ignited the priming powder, which entered the touch-hole (located in the breech of the barrel), which fired the main charge, which propelled the musket ball (bullet).