Video není dostupné.
Omlouváme se.
2 GUNS FOUND WHILE MUDLARKING !! Amazing finds, but I need your help to identify one.
Vložit
- čas přidán 15. 09. 2020
- While mudlarking, I find two guns! I was able to identify one, but I need your help to identify the other. I also found broken wine glasses, cutlery and Victorian china. It was a good day.
Introduction music: Happy Rock by Bensound.com from www.bensound.com
I'm glad for our sake you don't suffer from Mud-a-phobia. Great video, keep them coming!
Thanks Rusty for the muddy adventure! 🤗
I love your videos Rusty. BEST on CZcams! Please don’t ever stop!
Pipes were good finds among the debris👍 Second gun could be a handbrake lever. Hole down middle for push button release to the sliding bracket that looks like a gun handle?
Looks like the end bit of a blow torch
I agree. The 'loop' bit underneath looks like the pipe into the canister part
I've had a few people try and guess at the type of gun, and a few have said they thing it's part of a hand brake from a car. There's so much trash on this river, it's hard to even speculate how old it is. It's soaking in solution at the moment, so hopefully I'll have a big reveal later... unless it ends up being part of a blow torch!
I can't believe you threw that second pipe bowl away. Noooooo.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
he didn't did he?
There were only about a billion of them made.
Great video. Thanks!
Great finds Love Rusty Nails take care my friend
We used naval jelly on the a very rusty cap lock rifle we found. It wasn't great at removing the rust per se, more for loosening the rust and then you give it a nice electrolysis bath and the rust tends to pop off. It may desintrgrate your piece though if you leave it too long.
That first one it's a pellet gun you can push the barrel in and then it's ready to shoot a 1.77 pellet
shame there wasnt older stuff to find n what a shame modern rubbish isnt as interesting as older stuff.looked like a dirty river with little wildlife.good video.well done.x
This part of the river only dates from around the 1840's. The river used to meander downstream, and so a 'canal' was dug to help in navigation by making the river 'straight'.
Hey rusty are you from Renfrew and was this shot on the cart near the Normandy? I had a few old bottle stops from along there.
Hi Gary - spot on with your detective work. I'm from Paisley, and so the Cart is my local river.
Possibly some form of pocket pistol like a Darringer. Kept concealed in a pocket or vest.
Someone else suggested that as well. I think I saw something like it on the TV show 'Pawn Stars'. I think they described it as the sort of gun which wouldn't kill someone, but would help them see your point of view.
Rusty Nails generally all you’re really gonna do is piss someone off with it unless you’re at point blank range. It can be deadly however, President Lincoln was assassinated with the same style of gun.
Btw, keep it up sir, love the vids.
Electrolysis on the mystery item. Could be a great video.
Old Tires can be recycled . Highway pavement, playground mats and can be used as fuel in cement factories but i imaging that requires burning them and thats a pollutant in itself. However they are not suitable for using as gardening material as i have seen. They release contamination into the land fills and streams if they are dumped there that pollutes the water systems nearby.
It's just gross to see those tires. You would get a hefty fine here and rightfully so. The people that dumped them should be ashamed of themselves. It only costs a fiver to get rid of one is you even care about the environment at all.
Need legislation to add a returnable deposit to new tyres like with cans and bottles. They would be gone in seconds if there was a few quid to be had
Clay pipe my favourite find a great watch the air pistol unscrews at the top you place in the pellet then push the long shaft in fully against the spring to load then it is ready to fire ✨✨A1✨✨✨✨✨✨✨✨✨✨✨
On the 2nd "gun": Put it in a solution of 33% Molasses and 66% water. Wait a few weeks and the rust will dissolve off. Wash it well and put it back in if it's not rust free. Best thing is the solution is not nasty to the environment. I would cover the container, to keep insects and poets out of it.
It is also used to de-rust car bodies in a swimming pool sized tank, and fenders and such. The solution will smell though.
Those pesky poets, they’re worse than mimes!
I've got the 'gun' soaking in white vinegar at the moment, which seems to be dissolving, or at least loosening, some of the rust.
Aquachigger can identify the second gun for you. (youtuber)
Yes, Aquachigger is the man. If he doesn't know something, it isn't worth knowing in the first place.
Do you ever keep a thing? Projecting my value system on to you, I know, but I am curious. What is your criteria for keeping a particular finding?
I know I would want to keep everything too. But did you notice the size of his apartment?
I would also like to know your criteria for keeping an object and which objects you are more drawn to. Thanks for making videos.
Hi Robert - the vast majority of things I find are left at the site, so they can be re-discovered in years to come by others. I have a small collection of bottles (around 10-12) and a a dozen earthenware bottles/jars, which are my favourites, but generally the reward is finding them and capturing them for CZcams.
That 2nd "gun" looks more like the handle to the E-brake in a car...but then again it may be what's left of a starter pistol or something.... Too bad you didn't show the pipes you found! They were interesting!
What were you doing in October 1972?
Jeezo... 1972? Living in Sydney, Australia and getting ready for High School the following year. Strangely enough, it was around 1975 when I found an abandoned house after school one day, and I had a great time poking around inside. That is where my interest in old things stems from.
the second " gun" you need to soak it in white vinegar for about a week then it will become more visible no scrubbing untill then
Hi and thanks for your comment. I've just put it in white vinegar and so we'll see what happens! Thanks for the tip.
Precede with hope.
I think the gun shape of the second item is misleading thoughts. The bore is too small to be an old pistol i don't think it is a gun. But im just adding to speculation here, im no weaponry expert.
Hi Lee, I've got it soaking in solution at the moment to try and gently remove some of the rust. Apart from being a small hand gun, others have said it was part of a hand brake handle of even the top of a fire extinguisher. Fingers crossed it's a gun.
Do you keep anything?
Hi Sandra - I have a very small collection of bottles and earthenware jars etc. I try not to hoard things, and tend to leave things where they were found. My reward is to find them and record them for CZcams, and leave them for someone else to discover in the future.
Do you have any closer pictures?
I've got the gun/hand brake handle/fire extinguisher handle soaking is a solution at the moment. If I can definitely identify it as a small pistol, I'll let everyone know. If it's a handle of some sort, you'll never hear another word about it.
What part of Scotland are you from? My son in law is from Livingston
I'm from Paisley, on the western side of Scotland. Livingston is inland, slightly closer to Edinburgh and the east coast.
Is the secind gun find a derringer type gun?
Hi Rebecca - it was about the size of a Derringer, but did they not have two barrels? My find only had one.
@@RustyNailsadventures Im not sure if they all had 2 barrels. Research upcoming...
The originals derringers were single barreled weapons
Great video. Love that bridge you went under. A quick note, air gun laws are stricter in Scotland than the rest of the UK so not 100% sure you can legally posess the Gat without an airgun licence. I could be wrong though.
I think the web page I was reading was out-of-date or not an official page. I believe you are right, however the video title 'RUSTY NAILS GOES METAL DETECTING IN PRISION' might help my viewing figures!
@@RustyNailsadventures haha Yep you could be right with that. We'd miss the outdoor exploration and detecting videos though. Atb Dave
The second one might be the *very* rusted remains of a Webley Mk III service revolver, from the WW2 timeframe, but it’s really hard to tell without getting some of the rust off
You guys sure were sticklers for putting dates on EVERYTHING. Even bullets. I don't get it but there it is. Is your main interest in finding pieces of porcelain and pottery??
That is not a gun, looks more like a hand brake. Even with a handle it still isn't a gun that I've ever seen and I've seen and own many. Like another guy commented, the bore is WAY too small to be a useful weapon.
Hi, I'm not an expert on ammunition, but I believe the British Armed Forces date their ammo. Perhaps it's their version of a 'use by date' or something. Although porcelain and pottery are always cool finds, anything which has a story or date to it is interesting. I'm trying to remove some of the rust, so hopefully I'll have clues to the handbrake/gun mystery.
@@RustyNailsadventures Ammunition can last many many years if the powder inside doesn't get wet. My brother is a serious militaria collector, has a WWI machine gun type gun with a belt box full of bullets (can't remember the proper name) and has actually fired some of them. They still worked. Don't worry, he was a County Detective for 35 years and did this in a controlled police firing range. He has all the necessary papers, etc. to own and shoot the gun. It's pretty incredible how long some ammunition is viable.
You didn’t find two guns so kindly refrain from clickbaiting people! A more correct title would be: found a toy pistol and an unidentifiable piece of iron!