• This community needs YOUR help today. We rely 100% on Supporting Memberships to fund our efforts. With the ever increasing fees of everything, we need help. We need more Supporting Members, today. Please invest back into this community. I will ship a few decals too in addition to all the account perks you get.



    Sign up here: https://www.muzzleloadingforum.com/account/upgrades
  • Friends, our 2nd Amendment rights are always under attack and the NRA has been a constant for decades in helping fight that fight.

    We have partnered with the NRA to offer you a discount on membership and Muzzleloading Forum gets a small percentage too of each membership, so you are supporting both the NRA and us.

    Use this link to sign up please; https://membership.nra.org/recruiters/join/XR045103

What Muzzleloading Stuff Did You Do Today?

Muzzleloading Forum

Help Support Muzzleloading Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
made a new vent pick. piece of scrap curly maple, turned in drill
 

Attachments

  • 20221226_113740.jpg
    20221226_113740.jpg
    2.1 MB · Views: 0
Today as a Christmas present to myself.
Pulled my convertible 1851/1871 Navy that has been in percussion mode down to stripped frame and found the interior really nasty. It has had perhaps no more than 50 rounds as a percussion gun and I am afraid it will live it's live as an unmentionable. End of that story.
Puzzling but it was used with RWS1075 caps perhaps that is the problem.
Fear not I have a super trick 1851Navy done by 45D who has solved the flat trigger bolt spring trouble by replacing the flat bolt spring part with a coil spring and the flat trigger spring part with an adjustable coil spring and plunger.
The trigger is adjusted to 3# and pretty crisp. Not 19111 crisp. but nothing is.
Stay warm
Bunk
 
Took a T/C .45 Hawken out with a 77 grain charge under .440 round balls with salvaged silk patches to assassinate another milk jug. Silk patches tend to be thinner than most other patches, which makes loading very easy. Gun was a Frankenstein project based on a T/C Hawken and is equipped with a William's FP-Hawken rear sight. Twist was standard T/C 1:48. Target was thirty yards out with a stiff cross-wind. Temperature about ten degrees. Lubed the patch with olive oil, did not trim it at all.

I have concluded that silk works just fine for shooting patches. The fit is a bit loose with Hornady .440 swaged lead round balls, and I have not tested this load for ball retention, but the proof was in the milk jug carcass punched through dead center. All that said, while silk IS an adequate patching material, it really works no better than cotton or linen, and as it is much more expensive than either of these other materials, there is no point in spending double the price for it. Now if you are willing to recycle an old silk pillowcase or maybe a second-hand store taffeta dress, it will work as well as the other materials and you can brag about your silk patches if you are so inclined.
 
That empty milk jug was giving me dirty looks, so I filled it with dish water and took it out for termination. Used a .40 caliber 180 grain LSWC in a .45 caliber sabot with 7 grains of 3f and 70 grains of Triple 7. Loaded the gun indoors, went out to the porch and capped it. In the swirling wind and snow, I made the "hit" with one shot at fifty yards. When I went back inside, I noticed my reading glasses on the kitchen table. I had forgotten to put them on. Maybe I am not as blind as I thought... or... could it have been the wind? Nah....
?Reading glasses for a 50 yard shot?
You are lucky. I could not find the door without my glasses, let5 alone score at 50 yards!
 
To all concerned
I am doing fine just an old (very old) stove up cowboy.
Still shooting a little here at home but my cowboy and SASS are behind me
Bunk
Bunk, glad to hear you are doing fine.

My father is an old cowboy from the old ways. I know just what kind of stove up you're talkin about. He was talking about his rodeo days during Christmas. I sure do enjoy hearing those stories.

Some of those stories include his fathers Colt SAA, built in 1922, chambered in 32WCF. He has always wanted a rifle to go with it, and I was lucky enough to find an original condition 1892 Winchester, built in 1913, to be it's match. That was his Christmas gift from me this year. The look on his face was worth it 1000%
 
Had a chance to put my first shots through a Pietta Smith carbine that I got from the wise and powerful @BigSkyRambler

I replaced the factory trigger/sear spring with a coil spring from Paul Gritmacker over on the N-SSA site. It greatly improved the trigger pull.

Lead from @Justin.44
Mould from @Eras Gone
Plastic cartridge cases from Lodgewood
Lube from @Hermit Tim
THANK YOU gentlemen!

35gr 3f Schuetzen
RWS musket caps
354gr .518 boolit

40 yards offhand.
Center hold, center of tank.
I pulled the first shot.
#2, 3, and 4 are the other hole
The PERFECT black powder truck gun!

SmithTarget.jpg
 
Had a chance to put my first shots through a Pietta Smith carbine that I got from the wise and powerful @BigSkyRambler

I replaced the factory trigger/sear spring with a coil spring from Paul Gritmacker over on the N-SSA site. It greatly improved the trigger pull.

Lead from @Justin.44
Mould from @Eras Gone
Plastic cartridge cases from Lodgewood
Lube from @Hermit Tim
THANK YOU gentlemen!

35gr 3f Schuetzen
RWS musket caps
354gr .518 boolit

40 yards offhand.
Center hold, center of tank.
I pulled the first shot.
#2, 3, and 4 are the other hole
The PERFECT black powder truck gun!
Great! Now I gotta figure out what I have to sell to get one of these...
 

Latest posts

Back
Top