Designs using superposed loads have appeared periodically throughout firearms history, though they have met with only limited success. They have always been plagued with issues of sequential charges firing together, which can result in a burst barrel and injury to the user. Porta's description is very similar to a
Roman candle, in that it uses a propellant charge topped with an undersized ball, followed by a slower-burning charge to add a delay, repeating until the muzzle is reached. The chain of charges is fired by igniting the last layer of slow-burning powder, whereupon the gun fires each charge in succession. •
Samuel Pepys also mentions in a 1662 entry of his
diary a
gun that would discharge seven times, and described it as "very serviceable." • A British patent for superposed loads in a single barrel was issued in 1682 to Charles Cardiff. • American inventor Joseph Belton combined the earlier superposed load concepts into the
Belton flintlock, which used a sliding lock with multiple touchholes to ignite separated sets of fused charges, allowing multiple shots per pull of the trigger and multiple shots to be fired by repositioning and recharging the lock. Belton attempted to
license his invention to the
Continental Congress in 1777, and to the
British Army and the
East India Company in 1784. • An American gunsmith,
Isaiah Jennings, produced a superposed load gun mentioned in a
New York Evening Post article on April 10, 1822. The article claims the gun consists of a single barrel and lock, which may fire fifteen to twenty charges, which can be fired in the space of two seconds per charge. Jennings' gun adds, in addition to the sliding lock and multiple touchholes of earlier designs, a mechanism for automatically priming the pan of the lock, meaning each shot can be fired by simply cocking the lock and pulling the trigger. A 12-shot, breech-loading flintlock version of Jennings rifle, serial number 1, sold for
US$34,000 at auction in 2006. • The
Metal Storm design attempted to solve these problems, but was a commercial failure. ==See also==