Since childhood, he loved tinkering with his father's bird gun used for scaring birds, and was quite familiar with firearms, but had never seen anything as powerful as this.
Pulling the short metal lever next to the gun mechanism, a gentle breath can blow out the partially burned paper cartridge.
Next, you insert a paper cartridge bullet filled with gunpowder and push the lever back vigorously, completing the loading for the next shot.
This type of rifle doesn't even require cleaning the bore or slowly pouring gunpowder; close the breech and it's ready to fire!
When soldiers push and pull the lever, the breech emits a crisp "ding" sound, so they jokingly call it the "ding-ding rifle," while those mountain people, for some reason, call it "cow-boy rifle."
Regardless of what others call it, Laman prefers its official name—"Roxey 1052 Rifle."
The name comes from "Roxey Colin" Prince, produced by the Punk Gun Factory in Thunder City.
