A few years ago I built a Crocket from a kit. It was my first build and I’ve shot it a lot since then. I haven’t hunted with it yet, though. We live on acreage here in Arkansas and I’m about 30 minutes from the Ozark National Forest. I’ve always used our 9 month squirrel season as a reason to get out, so this year I think I’ll chase em with black powder. Thinking of getting a Kibler kit, but for now the Crocket will do just fine.
I’ve come to realize that my Crocket prefers tighter combos. I’ve been shooting .315 balls with .018 ticking (dry patch method) with good results. As I can’t find a mold for these balls I decided to try a few .319 balls to see how they worked before getting a mold. Im plenty satisfied with both after today’s brief outing.
Only had a short time before rain sat in so I only got to fire two of each. Will shoot more tomorrow if weather permits. The .319 balls still loaded well with the same ticking strips and the small group (2) proved enough potential that I can feel good about ordering a mold. Here are the results: (20 grains Swiss at 25 yards, rested on a fence).
first group .315, second group .319. 2 shots each due to rain.
I’ve come to realize that my Crocket prefers tighter combos. I’ve been shooting .315 balls with .018 ticking (dry patch method) with good results. As I can’t find a mold for these balls I decided to try a few .319 balls to see how they worked before getting a mold. Im plenty satisfied with both after today’s brief outing.
Only had a short time before rain sat in so I only got to fire two of each. Will shoot more tomorrow if weather permits. The .319 balls still loaded well with the same ticking strips and the small group (2) proved enough potential that I can feel good about ordering a mold. Here are the results: (20 grains Swiss at 25 yards, rested on a fence).
first group .315, second group .319. 2 shots each due to rain.