saber964 wrote:Actually Charis has progressed through about 50 years of firearms development in roughly 5 years.
IIRC
Flintlock 1670-1830's
Percussion cap 1830's-1860's
Metallic Cartridges 1850's- present day
Repeating firearms pistol late 1840's- present day e.g. Colt S&W and Remington
Repeating firearms rifle late 1850's- present day e.g. Spencer Sharps and Henry
Read the post again.
I laid out what my benchmarks were for arriving at those numbers and I based those numbers on when in Earth history you would find an issue or mass produced arm
exactly like Charis is using, not just when innovations X and Y were introduced.
They started with smoothbore matchlocks just like everyone else was using. That is comparable with the early to mid 1600's.
They immediately jumped to flintlock RIFLES using Minie balls to speed loading. First, that's actually a big anachronism since the Minie ball is a development from the percussion era. Flintlock rifles didn't see issue in the military in great numbers until the "Experimental Corps of Riflemen" was formed by the British in 1800.
Percussion conversion of the rifles would move them forward to something comparable with the rifled muskets of the Civil War Era- the '58 Enfield and the '61 Springfield. Call it 50 years, just for argument's sake, because the guns developed in the 1840's like the 1842 Springfield were still smooth bore.
The jump to the metallic cartridge breechloaders moves things into the late 1860's to early 1870's. Yes, there were metallic cartridges in the 1850's. They were like the .22BB and .22CB caps, little more than primers with a bullet stuffed in the open end. Even the rimfires used in the Henry and Spencer are grossly underpowered in comparision to what Charis started with out of the gate. That round is centerfire, large bore and has a large powder capacity. That moves things to the post Civil War era since the round is close to the .50-70 of the Allin conversions and the .45-70 of the 1873 Trapdoor.
The next move, to large bore, bolt action, detachable box magazine fed, repeating rifles is good for another 20 or so years. While bolt action repeaters were available in the late 1870's (ie., the Reemington-Keene in 1878), they used tubular magazines. The detachable box magazine used in guns shooting comparable ammunition (note that part- just because a .30 caliber rifle was built in 187-something doesn't mean that the action would scale up to a .45 and I didn't stop until I found an
exact comparison) pushes it into the 1880's or 1890's.