
Since
mcclaw and I are still uncertain whether Rosemary will have a long arm or a sidearm in his commission I have also worked up a design for pistol-sized weapon as a possible candidate. The design's overall appearance draws heavily from the manual repeater pistols that several designers explored in the late 19th century. The manual repeater pistol, like the Bittner pistol, link represented a step toward the true semi-automatic pistols that would emerge at the end of the century. But enough real history. Time for melodrama!
Dr. Rostov's Rapid Resonance Repeater! It is a large pistol-style weapon that employs resonance as a potential lethal force. Housed inside the weapon is a specially tuned crystal, that when struck by a hammer or similar type concussive device produces a frequency that the weapon's emitter fork to produce a specific resonance that can be to human life. The resonance is focused and aimed via a small directional parabolic dish that is located behind the emitter fork. While often used as a pistol it has a holster-stock that allows it to be converted it into a small carbine.
To cock the weapon you use the ring-trigger guard/cocking lever to prepare the hammer/ striker for use. Pulling the trigger causes the hammer to go forward and strike the crystal. After about 50 shots the crystal must be removed and replaced.

Dr. Rostov's Rapid Resonance Repeater! It is a large pistol-style weapon that employs resonance as a potential lethal force. Housed inside the weapon is a specially tuned crystal, that when struck by a hammer or similar type concussive device produces a frequency that the weapon's emitter fork to produce a specific resonance that can be to human life. The resonance is focused and aimed via a small directional parabolic dish that is located behind the emitter fork. While often used as a pistol it has a holster-stock that allows it to be converted it into a small carbine.
To cock the weapon you use the ring-trigger guard/cocking lever to prepare the hammer/ striker for use. Pulling the trigger causes the hammer to go forward and strike the crystal. After about 50 shots the crystal must be removed and replaced.
Category All / All
Species Unspecified / Any
Size 1000 x 648px
File Size 65.2 kB
Well I imagined the action using something similar to the Henry rifle or the Volcanic pistols. Locking action but not terribly stout or sturdy. http://www.littlegun.info/curios%20.....ction%20gb.htm Of course the hammer is not striking a primer but instead the harmonic crystal mounted in the front part of the pistol body.
Yeah. I graduated from the Colorado School of Trades, the best school in the country at the time, in 1978. Haven't really worked in the field since, as gunsmiths in Colorado rarely made even minimum wage. Mostly it makes it easy for me to maintain my own arsenal, tiny though it is.
Graduated The gunsmithing program at Lassen college in 1984. Ran my shop specializing in rebarreling and custom metalwork for 18 years till burnout. Did a number of guns for SCI. Spent the last 4 years in the business building DB rifles. Been running the CNC machine shop where I work and designing and producing custom motorcycle parts for the last 10 years.
Just today, my boss informed me that he was just issued a firearms manufacturing license. (I knew he was after it) Gonna be building a few AR odds and ends and some Exotics! They are also getting ready to make silencers legal in Iowa where I live. We will more than likely be making those too! :)
Just today, my boss informed me that he was just issued a firearms manufacturing license. (I knew he was after it) Gonna be building a few AR odds and ends and some Exotics! They are also getting ready to make silencers legal in Iowa where I live. We will more than likely be making those too! :)
I've seen this moving trigger ring on other antique pistols, but I've never been able to wrap my head around what they are for. Reading the description, it's basically the thumb cocking lever moved to the trigger. So, in a sense, it's how you can make a mechanically single-action behave like a double-action? If so, I wonder why it never caught on. My guess is either expense, mechanical complexity, double-action thumb levers being developed before the trigger ring lever caught on, or that a thumb lever allows for finer control than a double action per trigger pull mechanism (the latter being the reason why I prefer other pistols over a Glock, which is double action on every trigger pull).
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