- The
kammerladers were
manufactured in
several different models, and most
models were at some
point modified in some way or other. The
kammerladers were...
- the
Norwegian Armed Forces adopted the breech-loading caplock, the
Kammerlader, one of the
first instances in
which a
modern army
widely adopted a breech-loading...
-
field cleaning in less than 10 minutes.
Podewils gun M1819 Hall
rifle Kammerlader Werndl–Holub
rifle Caseless ammunition Ryozen Museum of
History exhibit...
- the 19th century.
Among other orders, they
manufactured 2,000 M1849
kammerladers for the
Norwegian Army.
Crause was
founded by its namesake, Carl Phillip...
-
front for reloading,
similar in
concept to the
later Swedish-Norwegian
kammerlader. In essence, the
weapon was
still loaded front to back, but
without the...
-
Norwegian service, it
replaced the
Remington M1867 and the last few
kammerladers still in use. When the
weapon was
chosen and
first issued, the military...
- Krag–Petersson and the last of the
remaining Remington M1867 and
modified kammerladers rimfire rifles and carbines. A
number of 1896 and 1897 Steyr-manufactured...
-
various arms for
various nations around Europe,
among others 1,500 M1849
kammerladers for Norway.
Later they
concentrated on high-quality,
expensive civilian...
-
Empire 1916
Kalthoff repeater Kalthoff gunsmiths .40-.80 in Denmark 1630
Kammerlader Minié ball in
paper cartridge Norway 1842
Karabinek wz. 1929 Państwowa...
-
moveable chambers such as revolvers,
harmonica guns,
Kalthoff repeaters,
Kammerlader rifles or,
split breech designs. This
article primarily addresses the...