The Porter Rifle

The Porter Rifle

Before the Civil War, competition was fierce among gun designers to create a practical repeating rifle. In 1851, inventor P.W. Porter thought he had the solution. It was a nine-shot, .44-caliber percussion gun that fed from a radial magazine, which was rotated and locked by a lever. The individually loaded chambers on the perimeter of the turret were ignited by a self-priming side-hammer mechanism.

But there were issues. The rifle was as complex as the average lunar rocket-“and it was equally dangerous at both ends. With the turret loaded, one chamber was pointed at the shooter, and if the primer flash went into that chamber, he got to see what the next world was like. Nevertheless, Porter went into production and built 1,250 rifles in three variations, mostly in Manhattan. This is the Second Model, of which 350 to 400 were made. It has a screw-off cover for its magazine and a serpentine loading lever at the muzzle. It looks to be in NRA Fair condition (basically, a 3 on a scale of 10) and, assuming the action is operable, is worth $4,500 to $5,000. Not a bad thing to turn up in a closet.

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Amazing Hearses

Amazing Hearses

 
The Hearse may be one of the most beautiful and scary vehicles ever created. People seeing them drive by often get chills and look away. But if you want to satisfy your morbid curiosity, click on this link. Go ahead… don’t be afraid!

Amazing Hearses

At a carshow in Madrid last February, visitors got to see ornately crafted classic hearses. This one, known as La Llorana–“The Weeping Woman,” is built on a 1928 Latil truck chassis.
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Three-Barreled Revolver

This gun will help to improve your accuracy.

Three-Barreled Revolver

Three  barrel handgun

How do you increase the ammunition capacity of a revolver? We’ve seen some inventive but impractical attempts to answer that question. This one of a kind Spanish revolver is at least portable. Each cycle brings 3 6.5 mm cartridges to bear. You can fire 18 rounds before you have to reload.

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Abandoned Antique Cars Nature Has Reclaimed

After they paved paradise and put up a parking lot, paradise fought back. Peter Lippmann’s photos foretell the fate of many a gas-guzzling machine with cars that have been reclaimed by nature.

Lippmann’s photo series is called, appropriately, Paradise Parking, and it’s all the more beautiful for having antique cars as its subjects. I imagine it would take a bit longer for some more modern vehicles to look so melancholy under the ivy.

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