Sorry but I have to ask- are you focusing on your front sight?
YES this is true for CVA and Traditions "longrifle" locks and it should be located here if there is one..., if not, check to see if the screw is missing.
LD
but for target shooting we try to immobilize it with glue or nail polish...
Like us... red or green, the Loctite glue ?We use a special product called "locktite"...
Like us... red or green, the Loctite ?
A bottle of clear nail polish has been a staple in my shooting box for years.Red, green, even purple....
BUT..., nail polish in a pinch if one cannot get the locktite.
LD
But no one mentioned this (unless I missed it). Have you tried shooting 50 yards with a bigger target? Ideally one with a white dot at 10 ring.
First: you should be testing from a bench rest to eliminate variability from operator inconsistencies, hang fires, etc.. Usually, the tighter the patch, the better so definitely try that. Also, non-uniform lubrication of the patching can produce erratic results. Next, cutting of the patching by the riffling may be an issue. I have seen a lot of those old CVAs that would cut patches pretty bad. Collect some fired patches and check for cutting by rough grooves/lands. Next, if your rifle's nipple is installed in a drum instead of directly the breech, then pull the drum and see if it has a restricted path to the powder. Rough grooves/lands that cause patch cutting can be smoothed by lapping the barrel. A restricted path from a drum can be bored out or the threads on the drum cut back.I have been silently perusing these boards for a few weeks and have learned a lot from you all - so thank you. I am the new owner of an old CVA Kentucky .45, gifted by a neighbor who had it in his closet for years. My first muzzleloading experience (actually, this is my first powder burner of any type. Been shooting high-powered air guns).
I must say, I think I am hooked. I've really been enjoying learning how to use this rifle, even though I have far to go and it takes forever to clean this beast, compared to an air rifle.
At first, I could barely hit a pizza box at 25 yards. It was all over the place. Trigger was extremely heavy pull - I had the wrong patch and ball size etc.
Experimented with patches, loads, holds, etc. and now have 1" groups at 25-30 yards. It's taken me about 50 or 60 shots to get to this point. An improvement but certainly not good enough.
I am using a .445 ball with a .010 patch, 40 grains of Pyrodex 2F (it's the only thing I could find available when I was shopping a few months ago.) I swab with one wet and one dry patch in between every shot. Spit lube seems to be working best for me at the moment.
I've tried up to 60 grains and the groups only seem to get worse.
So why are my groups almost acceptable at 25 but so incredibly huge at 50 yards?
(My guess: too light a charge and the ball doesn't have enough spin and starts to knuckleball after 30 yards or so.)
But why does 60 grains widen my groups?
(My guess: something wrong with my hold and the stronger kick is throwing me off.)
I am coming from airgunning to black powder. How should I hold this ol' Kentucky rifle?
My next plan is to try an even tighter patch, maybe a .015 since loading still seems fairly easy (I don't really need a ball starter currently.) Also going to try and find some 3F powder.
That's a lot of questions and I humbly thank you experienced black powder veterans for sharing your wisdom and/or laughter at my antics.
- G
P.S. I am a nerd and bought a chrony: 1260 fps at 40 grains. 1460 fps at 50 grains. 1540 at 60 grains.
Excellent advice!Good advice here so far. Sounds like your load is good for 25 yards. Start from the beginning. Sighting in your rifle. Usually start with grains of powder=caliber. So for a .45 start with 45 grains. Shoot 3-5 shots a a target point and note the grouping. Do this and increase your load by 5 grains for each group. I find a 6 bull target great for this process. You should see the groups rise as the load gets larger and then peak out at a certain range. For that .45 I would guess that point is between 60 and 70 grains. Settle on the load that gives you the highest point of impact and tightest group with the least amount of powder. SO if 65 and 70 grains are both shooting a good tight group at the same altitude, go with a 65 grain load.
Once you have your load, then adjust the sights for zero. All of this should be off a steady bench rest hold.
Now its time to start practicing off hand. Note that these rifles with curved buttplates are made to be held at the cusp of the bicep and the shoulder with your arm parallel to the ground, not against your shoulder like most modern arms. Get good at 25, then practice at 50 and get confident at that range. Then try 100 ( or whatever various distances available at your range). When I got to the 100 yard distance it was the third trip to the range before I was hitting the target paper. After a year of practice I could fairly consistently score all shots on the 100 yard target (not great scores mind you, but they did score).
P.S. Oh yes - I don't like the sights. They are both very shiny and hard to focus on, also, the elevation is not adjustable on the rear notch sight. I made myself a little temporary homemade peep and attached it to the rear notch - I felt like that also helped get me the 1" groups at 25 yards.
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