Gaspard Kollner

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Gaspard Kollner was a fifteenth- or sixteenth-century gunsmith based in Vienna. He is credited with having discovered that by rifling, that is, adding spiral grooves to the insides of the smoothbore muskets then in use, it was possible to make the gun not only shoot straighter but that its effective range would also increase. [1]

Some authorities, however, point out that Kollner's barrels had straight, parallel grooves [2] and that it was Augustus Kotter, of Nuremberg, who introduced the spiral-grooved barrels, in 1520. [3]

The premise is that the principle was adapted from the crossbows of the day, much more precise weapons than the musket, and which shot the bolt through a spiral-grooved guiding tube. However, it is not clear whether these crossbows were designed before or after the introduction of spiral grooving in firearms. [3]

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Freebore</span>

In firearms, freebore is the portion of the gun barrel between the chamber and the rifled section of the barrel bore. The freebore is located just forward of the chamber neck and is cylindrical in shape. The diameter of the freebore is larger than the groove diameter of the gun barrel bore so that no rifling is present and projectiles used in the firearm can accelerate through the freebore without resistance.

References

  1. Martin, Robert E. (September 1941). "What about the Rifle?". Popular Science. 139 (3): 106.
  2. Lamphier, Peg A.; Welch, Rosanne (2019). Technical Innovation in American History: An Encyclopedia of Science and Technology. ABC-CLIO. p. 35. ISBN   978-1-61069-094-2.
  3. 1 2 Greener, W. W. (2013) [1881]. "XXV. The History of Rifling and Its Development. The Invention of Rifling". The Gun and Its Development. Skyhorse Publishing. ISBN   978-1-5107-2025-1.