Here I am hunting elk with my first Bridger.View attachment 114257
You my friend, look like an elk killer!
Here I am hunting elk with my first Bridger.View attachment 114257
It appears to me you are enjoying life way to much! LOL! If I caught someone doing that to his rifle I would pass out!LME, the thing about building copies of rifles as they look today, such as the Bridger Hawken, is that any handling marks add to the look. They are good. I took the first copy to the Fort Bridger Rendezvous and carried it around. Nobody paid any attention to it. I got a buffalo burger and smeared grease all over the stock. Anything goes.
When Robert Redford, the actor of the movie Jeremiah Johnson, had the Green River Rifle Works make him a Hawken, he didn't like the new look. Carney, who worked there, told me the builders then took turns beating dents into the stock with tools. I also heard, and it might be true, that Redford tied a lasso to the rifle and dragged it down a gravel road behind his pickup.
Here I am hunting elk with my first Bridger.View attachment 114257
Great picture. Did ya get one?LME, the thing about building copies of rifles as they look today, such as the Bridger Hawken, is that any handling marks add to the look. They are good. I took the first copy to the Fort Bridger Rendezvous and carried it around. Nobody paid any attention to it. I got a buffalo burger and smeared grease all over the stock. Anything goes.
When Robert Redford, the actor of the movie Jeremiah Johnson, had the Green River Rifle Works make him a Hawken, he didn't like the new look. Carney, who worked there, told me the builders then took turns beating dents into the stock with tools. I also heard, and it might be true, that Redford tied a lasso to the rifle and dragged it down a gravel road behind his pickup.
Here I am hunting elk with my first Bridger.View attachment 114257
Heartily disagree. My experience is the 1:48 is a very forgiving rate of twist for 'almost' (I have not shot all calibers) all calibers. The slower twists require heavier charges to find their sweet spot. A .54 with 1:72" twist I once had required shoulder injuring heavy charges before it would group. My 1:48s, mostly .45 cal, performed beautifully with as little as 45 gr real bp but held their groups when the charges were upped for longer ranges or hunting. There has to be a reason why museum examples are overwhelmingly found to be 1:48. The knew something back then we are still discovering.A 1-48 twist is a compromise for either round ball of conical. If you load a round ball too heavy. you lose accuracy. Dedicated round ball rifles are better off with 1-66 or 1-70 twist rate. Round balls have almost no sectional density and need very little spin.
I wouldn't necessarily say the 1-48 went bad......nowdays there are just opinions all over the place !! It sorta seems like no matter what a guy starts a conversation over when it comes to this stuff, somebody else will have a different way of doing it, or different products likes lubes and stuff..... Lots of opinions out there....and I have to say I like some of them !!After 192 years why did 1 in 48 suddenly go bad.
Inquiring minds are wondering?
Is it 'cause of the www.?
I wasn’t going to post since these thread are getting old but you are 100% right! My Hawkens (4 of them) all TCs shoot on ragged hole at 50yds. They all have a 1-48”. I think the loads is universal, 70 grs of FFFg, .495 PRB cast from anRCBS mold, .010 pillow thickin’ and 1075!… a steady but of awesome smelling coconut oil for lube. They are wonderful shooting guns! Now, may I should start a new thread,” “is the 45 good enough for deer?”My renegade is unbelievably good shooting a PRB and it has 1-48 twist. Anyone who says a 1-48 cannot shoot a ball is full of it.
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