Earlier firearms used
flintlock mechanisms causing a piece of
flint to strike a
steel frizzen producing sparks to ignite a pan of priming powder and thereby fire the gun's main powder charge. The flintlock mechanism replaced older ignition systems such as the
matchlock and
wheellock, but all were prone to misfire in wet weather. The discovery of
fulminates was made by
Edward Charles Howard (1774–1816) in 1800. The invention that made the percussion cap possible using the recently discovered fulminates was patented by the
Reverend Alexander John Forsyth of
Belhelvie,
Aberdeenshire, Scotland, in 1807. His invention of a fulminate-primed firing mechanism deprived the birds of their early warning system, both by avoiding the initial puff of smoke from the flintlock powder pan, as well as shortening the interval between the trigger pull and the shot leaving the muzzle. Forsyth patented his "scent bottle" ignition system in 1807. However, it was not until after Forsyth's patents expired that the conventional percussion cap system was developed.
Joseph Manton invented a precursor to the percussion cap in 1814, comprising a copper tube that detonated when crushed. This was further developed in 1822 by the English-born American artist
Joshua Shaw, as a
copper cup filled with fulminates. The first purpose-built caplock guns were
fowling pieces commissioned by sportsmen in
Regency era England. Due to the mechanism's compactness and superior reliability compared to the flintlock, gunsmiths were able to manufacture pistols and
long guns with two barrels. Early caplock handguns with two or more barrels and a single lock are known as turn-over or
twister pistols, due to the need to manually rotate the second barrel to align with the hammer. With the addition of a third barrel, and a ratchet to mechanically turn the barrels while cocking the hammer, these caplock pistols evolved into the
pepper-box revolver during the 1830s. The caplock offered many improvements over the flintlock. The caplock was easier and quicker to load, more resilient to weather conditions, and far more reliable than the flintlock. Many of the older flintlock weapons were later converted to the caplock, so that they could take advantage of these features. File:Japanese 19th century percussion pistol 1.jpg|Japanese matchlock converted to caplock, the brass band is dated to
Meiji 27 (明治二十七), i.e. 1894 File:Pair of Four-Barreled Turnover Percussion Pistols with Pair of Box-Lock Turn-Off Pocket Pistols, Case, and Accessories MET DP-13844-009.jpg|A pair of caplock twister pistols File:Pistolet à percussion inversée IMG 3074.jpg|Inverted percussion pistol, 9.5 mm; made by gunsmith Correvon,
Morges, 1854 File:Booth deringer.jpg|
John Wilkes Booth's single-shot caplock
derringer used to assassinate
Abraham Lincoln ==Parallel developments==