Alaskan Woodsman
Pilgrim
My new Green Mountain 32" long rifle barrel in .54 caliber with a 1-66 rate of twist is mounted on the TC stock. It fits like a glove and I am very pleased. The longer barrel is interesting.
I put the original 28" TC .50 caliber barrel, cleaned & oiled, in the packing box along with all .50 caliber jags and brushes, stored in the safe and put away for now. With the new .54 caliber jag and brush I also bought 100 Speer round balls in .530 caliber. I have an array of ticking thicknesses most of which are cut in strips, soaked in Dutch Schultz's recipe, dried and put in a zip lock with the thickness written on them in sharpee pen.
I cleaned the new barrel until the patches have no more grease on them. I used Hoppes Black Powder Solvent. I will use Schultz's moose milk for cleaning between shots if need or I might try Murphy's Soap. At the end of the day I usually clean the barrel in a bucket of hot soapy water and then gun oil the barrel thoroughly inside and out with a couple of saturated patches on the end of a cleaning rod.
Any suggestions or comments on breaking in a Green Mountain black powder rifle barrel?
I haven't broke-in a black powder rifle barrel in 40-years.
Thanks! Glen
I put the original 28" TC .50 caliber barrel, cleaned & oiled, in the packing box along with all .50 caliber jags and brushes, stored in the safe and put away for now. With the new .54 caliber jag and brush I also bought 100 Speer round balls in .530 caliber. I have an array of ticking thicknesses most of which are cut in strips, soaked in Dutch Schultz's recipe, dried and put in a zip lock with the thickness written on them in sharpee pen.
I cleaned the new barrel until the patches have no more grease on them. I used Hoppes Black Powder Solvent. I will use Schultz's moose milk for cleaning between shots if need or I might try Murphy's Soap. At the end of the day I usually clean the barrel in a bucket of hot soapy water and then gun oil the barrel thoroughly inside and out with a couple of saturated patches on the end of a cleaning rod.
Any suggestions or comments on breaking in a Green Mountain black powder rifle barrel?
I haven't broke-in a black powder rifle barrel in 40-years.
Thanks! Glen