I Was Anxious To Know How They Bored These Long Barrels, Which
Seemed Perfectly True And Are Said To Shoot Admirably; And, On
Asking The Gusti, Received The Enigmatical Answer:
"We use a
basket full of stones." Being utterly unable to imagine what he
could mean, I asked if I could see how they did it, and one of
the dozen little boys around us was sent to fetch the basket.
He
soon returned with this most extraordinary boring-machine, the
mode of using which the Gusti then explained to me. It was simply
a strong bamboo basket, through the bottom of which was stuck
upright a pole about three feet long, kept in its place by a few
sticks tied across the top with rattans.
The bottom of the pole has an iron ring, and a hole in which
four-cornered borers of hardened iron can be fitted. The barrel
to be bored is buried upright in the ground, the borer is
inserted into it, the top of the stick or vertical shaft is held
by a cross-piece of bamboo with a hole in it, and the basket is
filled with stones to get the required weight. Two boys turn the
bamboo round. The barrels are made in pieces of about eighteen
inches long, which are first bored small, and then welded
together upon a straight iron rod. The whole barrel is then
worked with borers of gradually increasing size, and in three
days the boring is finished.
Enter page number
PreviousNext
Page 233 of 419
Words from 63576 to 63825
of 114260