Kit includes a number of heavy-duty brass cases (which appear to be precision Phillipe Vial, was kindĮnough to provide one of his clever self-contained kits in that caliber. Revolver in 7mm, and the owner of the company, M. Pinfire revolvers and also 16 gauge pinfire shotguns. Makes a kit that can be used to prepare cartridges for 7mm, 9mm, and 12mm Had a chance to find out how one stacks up against more modern equivalents. People who own pinfire revolvers asĬuriosities may wonder how effective they were for the intended purpose. Making cartridges for them: many are goodĬondition and some are positively exquisite examples of gun making. How many of these guns have survived it's a bit surprising that no one is still Is no longer made except in the form of tiny 2mm blanks used in minuscule "key Pinfire guns are encountered only as collector's novelties pinfire ammunition The end of the 19 th Century, the Système Popular for self-defense in a crime-plagued era with few restrictions on the Them were small caliber revolvers (7mm and 9mm) with folding triggers, aįlip-open loading gate and a rod ejector. Thousands were turned out, mostly by the huge Belgian arms industry of the mid Of them, and the Confederate forces somewhere between 20.Īctual number of pinfire handguns made will never be known. Significant role in the American Civil War: the Union forces purchased 11,830 So-called "Model 1854" revolver using the pinfire ammunition his father hadĭerivatives were adopted for military use by many European nations and played a Young) lived to see his invention become a commercial success, it was his sonĮugene (1832-1892, at right) whose patent #19380, issued Novemintroduced the This Système Lefaucheux was a major development in the evolution of small arms. A blow on the pin would detonate the cap and set off the main charge. He received patent #6348 for a tip-up breech loading pistol using a self-contained cartridge in which a pin passed through the outside of the case and rested on a percussion cap enclosed within. The pinfire system of ignition, one of the first practical forms of true fixed ammunition, was the brainchild of Casimir Lefaucheux (1802-1852) a French gunsmith.