I recently acquired a privately published book (from the 1980's) written by a gentleman who knew Civil War veterans as a child and who had collected, shot, gunsmithed, etc. Colt '51 Navies as well as other Colt and various manufacturer's pistols from the Civil War. He mentions "capping grooves" which were sometimes filed in the capping rebate on the side of the frame behind the cylinder (where a loading gate would be for a cartridge revolver) as a modification by the owner to help in lining up the caps with the nipples, especially when loading "by feel" in the dark. He claims that he knew Civil War Vets that could remove three caps at a time from their cap pouch, held between the thumb and forefinger, and that they could easily place them in this groove and quickly cap three nipples in succession. He states that he was only able to master two caps at a time. He evidently had run across this "capping groove" on a number of revolvers that he had worked on over the years. I've shot BP revolvers and I think that one problem a lot of folks have is getting the cap on, especially if you have large fingers. Everyone seems to search for the perfect "mechanical capper" but in reality, caps were originally carried in the cap pouch on the belt, retrieved from there and placed on the nipple with the thumb and fingers unless the individual was lucky enough to have a "patented capper".
I have never really paid a whole lot of attention to original Colts other than to look at an occasional photo but all of this got me to wondering just how common this "capping groove" was. In looking at photos of originals listed un auction sites, I've seen some .36 Colt Pocket Police revolvers that have them (I've also seen some 2nd generation Colts that do) and have spotted some '51 Navies that do - some look like they might have come from the factory that way and several were obviously added at a later date. Can any collector out there shed some light on these "capping grooves" - were some revolvers made that way at the factory while others of the same model did not have them? Is this groove part of the difference between 1st Models, 2nd Models etc. of the same pistol such as the '51 Navy, Pocket Police, etc.
The capping groove seems to make a lot of sense to me in regards to lining up the cap with the nipple when capping by hand - enough so, that I think that I will add one to my '51 Navy repro. . I'd appreciate any feedback from out there if you have a "capping groove" on the pistol that yu shoot and how it works as well as how common they were on original pistols.
Thanks!