Don Dixon
Sergeant
- Joined
- Oct 24, 2008
- Location
- Fairfax, VA, USA
Among other factors you overlook the possibility of having the arms manufactured overseas to specifications drawn-up in the United States. This is not Monday morning quarterbacking.
Outside of the North, there were only two arms factories in the world capable of manufacturing fully interchangeable arms. Her Majesty's factory at Enfield Lock, England [Her Majesty wouldn't sell arms to either side], and the London Armoury. Both factories had purchased American manufactured production lines from Ames. EVERYONE else, including the manufacturers in Liege, Belgium, still used artisanal production, and their arms were not fully interchangeable. You would propose to manufacture significant quantities of repeating rifles, which were more much more complicated than the muzzle loading Springfield rifle musket which Northern factories were having difficulty producing in quantity, by artisans in home workshops using files to shape the parts to fit standard gauges. Since repair parts also had to be hand made and hand fitted, how would you have maintained the guns once they were received by the Federal Army and issued? The Federals and Confederates had enough trouble trying to keep their non-interchangeable parts Austrian, Belgian, Prussian, and French muzzle loaders operational in the field for that reason.
Ripley was down on breechloading/repeating rifles for the following reasons: concerns over the manufacturers' ability to meet the Ordnance Office's standards for interchangeability, cost, and concerns over the Army's logistical ability to maintain and feed the guns once they were in the field.
Regards,
Don Dixon

