>I'm no expert, but it seems to me that in the
descriptions I have read
>that rubber bands (many, many rubber bands wrapped
together) and possibly
>a clothespin were used in a zip-gun--the clothespin
held the nail and the
>rubberbands sent the nail into the bullet. I'll hve to
go watch West
>Side Story or something to be sure. Are there actual
zip guns in
>Timlin's Zip Gun Boogie or is it metphor? I haven't
read that one yet.
>Mark
Very interesting that this zip gun discussion came up,
because last
weekend I was at the Southern Mystery Gathering and in a
conversation
regarding youth crime I asked. "When the last time you heard
of a perp
using a zip gun."
People there didn't know what one was. The following comments
are simply
my own observations from having grown up in the crime capitol
of the
American South. The situation may have been different
elsewhere.
In my highly disturbed youth, I actually made and used zip
guns. I've seen
pictures of fairly ambitious ones using thick pipes but I
think most of
them like this were for people crazy enough to fire large
caliber rounds
in them. (Or else people who hadn't thought through the
implications of
having one blow up in their hand).
The standard ones we built had a wood frame, a short copper
pipe barrel,
and a firing apparatus consisting of a six inch nail steel
nail file with
a whole punched through it, the rough edge of which was used
as a firing
pin. The rig was usually set up to fire a .22 long round (not
long rifle).
The thought was that the .22 long was less likely to cause
the rig to blow
up in your face.
You'd pull the nail file back slowly to seat the round, and
when you
wanted to fire it, pull it back and let it slap against the
rim fire
cartridge. If that didn't fire you could hit the thing with a
brick.
Sometimes they worked. You wouldn't want to shoot through the
same barrel
many times.
They were mostly used for purposes of bluff. A baseball bat
was more
dependable and probably had a longer range. On the other had,
if a zip gun
was pointed at someone, they could never tell if this was
it's lucky day.
Zip guns were a result of the lack of firearms available to
the young and
the restless. They fell out of favor once everyone could own
a machine
pistol. In the late fifties, they were mostly for the 11-12
year old set.
Rounds for a .22 could be easily ripped off.
There wasn't really much other purpose for them than early
teen
posturing.. The "Saturday night special" , a cheap but real
.22 pistol,
was available and not beyond the means of your basic 16 year
old
desparado. The SNS certainly killed a lot of people.
The zip gun became a symbol for the JD culture like the
switchblade, but
my opinion is that the main reason for this was that they
made a great
newspaper picture. They looked frightening and the thought of
a lively arm
industry being run by the neighborhood babysitter was
unsettling. A
serious gangster was going to get a real handgun.
As I've said, the zip gun industry could have been different
elsewhere.
The ZG did serve as a useful short hand symbol like the
switchblade for
writers exploring the juvenille delinquent universe.
Fred
-- ----------------------------------------------------------- Down on Ponce by Fred Willard fwillard@mindspring.com http://fwillard.home.mindspring.com/ -----------------------------------------------------------
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