- Snaphance
A Snaphance or Snaphaunce is a particular type of mechanism for firing a gun (or a gun using that mechanism).
Like the earlier
snaplock and laterflintlock , the snaphaunce drives a flint onto a steel to create a shower of sparks to ignite the main charge (propellant).The
flint is held in a clamp at the end of a bent lever called the cock. Upon pulling the trigger, this moves forward under the pressure of a strong spring and strikes a curved plate of hardened steel (called simply the steel, or in 17th century English dialect thefrizzen ) to produce a shower of sparks (actually white-hot steel shavings). These fall into aflash pan holding priming powder. The flash from the pan travels through thetouch hole to cause the main charge ofgunpowder to deflagrate.The snaphance first appeared in the late 1550s as a development of the earlier
snaplock . The main improvement was that the pan-cover opened automatically (to keep the priming dry until the exact moment of firing), as in thewheel-lock . (The snaplock had a manually operated pan cover similar to that of thematchlock . Some definitions class the snaphaunce as a sub-type of snaplock.) Also like the wheel-lock, the snaphance used a lateral sear mechanism to connect trigger to cock. Later models had a variety of safety mechanisms to prevent accidental discharge of the gun.The snaphance was used from the late 1550s until modern times (in North African guns), but by about 1680 it was out of fashion everywhere except Northern Italy where it persisted until the 1750s. In Europe, and especially
France , the snaphance was replaced by theflintlock with its combined steel/pan cover starting from about 1620. In England, a hybrid mechanism called theEnglish Lock replaced the snaphance from the same date. Both the flintlock and the English lock were cheaper and less complex than the snaphance.The origin of the name snaphance is thought to come from the
Dutch language "Snap Haan" orGerman language "Schnapphahn"—both of which roughly mean "hen peck", and could relate to the shape of the mechanism and its downward-darting action (and would also explain the name "cock" for the beak-shaped mechanism which holds the flint). A more fanciful explanation relates to the use of this type of gun by chicken thieves, who would be given away by the sight and smell of a burning match if they had used the earlier matchlock gun in their nocturnal depredations. The German word "Schnapphahn" had however since moved away from the earlier definitions and has traditionally referred to a mountedhighwayman , who would have been likely to use afirearm of that nature. The French "chenapan" also changed its meaning in the seventeenth century to define a rogue or scoundrel.External links
* [http://www.glasgowmuseums.com/showExhibition.cfm?venueid=0&itemid=74&Showid=52&slideid=36 Scottish Snaphance Pistols]
* [http://www.miarma.com/miarma-01-01-04-esquemas-06.php Dutch Snaphance mechanism (in Spanish)]ee also
*
Firearm
*Flintlock
*Hand cannon
*Matchlock
*Miquelet
*Percussion cap
*Snaplock
*Wheellock
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