Adams (revolver)
The Adams revolver, also known as the Deane-Adams revolver, is a black powder, double-action, percussion revolver. Introduced in 1851, it was the first revolver designed and produced in the United Kingdom. It was heavily used by British officers during the Crimean War and the Indian Rebellion of 1857. It was the precursor of the more advanced Beaumont-Adams revolver, designed in 1856. After 1867, the production of breechloading Adams revolvers began, and many existing Adams and Beaumont-Adams revolvers were converted to breechloaders, using.450 Boxer centerfire cartridges. From 1872 to 1880, these revolvers were adopted as the official sidearms of the British Army and Navy and were in use until the 1880s.
Percussion revolvers
Since the production of the first Colt revolvers in 1836 up to 1851, the American Colt's Manufacturing company held a monopoly in revolver production in the United States and Europe. Between 1853 and 1857, Colt established a factory in London, supplying British customers with cheap, mass-produced revolvers with interchangeable, machine-produced parts. Colt even obtained some government contracts, selling 4,000 revolvers to the British Navy in 1854 and 14,000 to the British Army in 1855.As Colt's English patents expired in 1851, British designer Robert Adams made his own version of the revolver and patented it the same year, making a successful presentation of his design at the Great Exhibition of London in 1851. The weapons were tested by the official British military commission for the adoption in the British Army, although none was ultimately selected, due to the revolver's high price, equivalent to several [Single shot pistols|single-shot percussion pistols] commonly used in the military at the time.
Characteristics
Double-action trigger
Unlike contemporary Colt revolvers, whose hammer had to be cocked manually before every shot, the Adams revolver had a double-action trigger mechanism: pulling the trigger simultaneously cocked the hammer, rotated the cylinder, and fired the shot. This selfcocking revolver feature enabled a high rate of fire, although it required a heavy pull on the trigger, which made it almost impossible to aim the weapon except at point-blank range. Also, it was not possible to cock the hammer manually, and the hammer had no thumb projection. However, the British military commission found the double-action trigger mechanism superior to the Colt's single-action.Solid frame
Adams revolvers had a solid, one-piece frame with an integral barrel, all made from a single piece of steel, which gave them inherent strength and durability, although they were somewhat more expensive to produce, as their production required skilled workers. The British military commission found this construction superior to the Colt's multi-part open-frame revolver design, which was seen as inherently weaker and prone to break under pressure.High rate of fire and stopping power
Although the Adams revolver was rejected as an official British military weapon, its characteristics were well appreciated by the British public, soldiers and civilians alike, and many officers privately purchased the revolver at their own expense, along with the most popular contemporary revolver, the Colt 1851 Navy. As such, Adams revolvers saw heavy combat in Crimean war and Indian Mutiny of 1857. In these conflicts, Adams revolvers were deemed slightly better in some situations than Colts, due to their higher rate of fire at close range and slightly better stopping power. However, power and performance still lacked when compared to the newer models of the 1848 Colt Dragon produced the same year. In 1860, one officer of the 88th [Regiment of Foot (Connaught Rangers)|88th Regiment] wrote a letter to Robert Adams, praising his pistols:In April 1896, Lieutenant Colonel G. V. Fosbery commented about an incident with a Colt Navy revolver during the Indian Rebellion of 1857:
Criticism
Early Adams revolvers had three widely reported deficiencies, which were resolved in later models:No recoil shield on the breech behind the cylinder. Recoil shields were common in early British revolvers. The lack of a shield left the shooter exposed to hot gases and percussion cap fragments during firing. Colt's massive standing breech was much better.Low accuracy at medium and long distances, as the hammer could not be cocked by hand. That problem was addressed by Tranter revolvers in 1853 and Beaumont-Adams revolvers in 1856.No loading lever on early models: the slightly smaller balls were pressed into the cylinder chambers by fingers, which made them flimsy and prone to fall out on their own. A loading lever mounted on the left side of the frame was added in later models.Breechloading revolvers
Beginning in 1867, Adams Patent Small Arms Company of London started the conversion of the existing percussion revolvers into breechloaders using .450 Boxer centerfire cartridges, and simultaneously, the production of new breechloading revolvers began.Mark I
The adaptation of the old percussion revolvers included several operations:- replacement of the cylinder
- replacement of the hammer
- addition of a loading gate behind the cylinder on the right side
- removal of the rammer
- addition of a simple ejector rod in a horizontal sleeve attached to the front of the revolver frame, in front of the cylinder. By pushing this rod back, the empty cartridges were ejected one by one through the loading gate.