Article · Wikipedia archive · Last revised Jun 19, 2026

Friction primer

A friction primer is a device to initiate the firing of muzzle-loading cannon. Each friction primer consists of a copper tube filled with gunpowder. The tube fits into the cannon touch hole burying its lower end in the gunpowder chamber. The top end of the tube extending above the touch hole has a short perpendicular spur tube filled with a priming mixture of antimony sulfide and potassium chlorate. A roughened wire slider extends from the outer end of the spur tube through the priming mixture and the gunpowder tube. This slider wire is twisted into a loop on the opposite side of the gunpowder tube.

Last revised
Jun 19, 2026
Read time
≈ 1 min
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266 w
Citations
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Source
Most of these British friction primers do not have the wire loop attached. source ↗

A friction primer is a device to initiate the firing of muzzle-loading cannon. Each friction primer consists of a copper tube filled with gunpowder. The tube fits into the cannon touch hole burying its lower end in the gunpowder chamber. The top end of the tube extending above the touch hole has a short perpendicular spur tube filled with a priming mixture of antimony sulfide and potassium chlorate. A roughened wire slider extends from the outer end of the spur tube through the priming mixture and the gunpowder tube. This slider wire is twisted into a loop on the opposite side of the gunpowder tube.1

Operation

Early friction primer tube photographed in Heinola, Finland in 2015 source ↗

The wire loop may be attached to a lanyard. A sharp tug on the lanyard pulls the roughened slider wire through the priming mixture which responds like a match, igniting the gunpowder in the tube through the touch hole into the main powder charge within the chamber of the cannon. The length of the lanyard allows the person firing the cannon to avoid injury by standing to one side as the cannon recoils.1 Friction primers were packed in sawdust in tinned metal boxes for storage and transport.2

See also

See also

Sources

Sources

  1. Manucy, Albert C. (1994). Artillery Through the Ages. DIANE Publishing. pp. 26–27. OCLC 52131217. Archived from the original on 9 February 2025 – via National Park Service.
  2. Melton, Jack W. "Friction Primer Tin". Civil War Artillery. Retrieved 10 June 2019.