Concentrate on the sights only. Never mind the flash and smoke. Follow through on the sight picture.
That is #1
New flint shooters are going to look at the flash it happens to every new flint shooter say don't look at it will not help period
The first time I fired a flintlock was many moons ago at the Beaumont, Texas gun club. A gentleman (?!) handed me a loaded home-grown 20 guage flinter with a short modern shotgun barrel and a huge lock on it. When I fired it off, the flash and smoke was like putting one's head next to the tailpipe of a backfiring '56 Pontiac. I flinched so badly that the .62 round ball, traveling at an elevated angle divergent to the range, probably wound up somewhere west of the Brazos river. After that shocking introduction, the pan flash on my subsequently acquired flint guns has never bothered me, that I can recall. I was grateful to be allowed to shoot the guy's bear killer, even though there was enough powder in the pan to fry the hide off a corn fed '****. All these years and a few flintlocks later, the only rock lock I now own is a home grown .62 caliber smoothbore 'canoe gun' with a 20 inch barrel, eerily similar to the psychotic pyrotechnic device that began this humble shooter's unwary sojourn into the fiery underworld of lurking flinchlocks, heh heh! Geo.it seems the1st thing everyone starts going on about is ignoring the pan flash and all the ways to go about not letting it effect the shooter. So, in essence, the 1st thing everyone makes a big fuss about is the #1 thing we don't want the shooter to notice or think about. Before they've even had an issue with it. This doesn't make sense to me...
Good Lord, another fine example of how not to start off a new shooter. Glad you got past it. Some folks would grin, laugh, and ask for more, many would have been completely put off by that experience. In over 20 years training pistol wielders, 18 of them on a public range, I've seen a lot of folks introduce non-shooters to firearms in ways that either make the person not want to shoot again or cause them to have flaws in the way they shoot that take intense intervention to correct.The first time I fired a flintlock was many moons ago at the Beaumont, Texas gun club. A gentleman (?!) handed me a loaded home-grown 20 guage flinter with a short modern shotgun barrel and a huge lock on it. When I fired it off, the flash and smoke was like putting one's head next to the tailpipe of a backfiring '56 Pontiac. I flinched so badly that the .62 round ball, traveling at an elevated angle divergent to the range, probably wound up somewhere west of the Brazos river. After that shocking introduction, the pan flash on my subsequently acquired flint guns has never bothered me, that I can recall. I was grateful to be allowed to shoot the guy's bear killer, even though there was enough powder in the pan to fry the hide off a corn fed '****. All these years and a few flintlocks later, the only rock lock I now own is a home grown .62 caliber smoothbore 'canoe gun' with a 20 inch barrel, eerily similar to the psychotic pyrotechnic device that began this humble shooter's unwary sojourn into the fiery underworld of lurking flinchlocks, heh heh! Geo.
I’ve seen the guy a couple of times since and he still talks about ‘surviving’ his adventure with the flintlock. Unfortunate part is that he was getting in to it and didn’t have a concern until he saw the photographs. Doubt it would have made a difference if he was just sparking off the powder in the pan. He is a CMP M1 Garand shooter so he is is used to the thump from high power rifles. It was all about the flash from the flint pan. 50 grains of powder under a 58 cal RB in that gun is pretty easy on the shooter.SDSmif, That's unfortunate about the new shooter. Sometimes the 'JuJu' is much worse than the actual bite. Maybe someone will eventually try him again on a more compatible caliber and charge but if not, the world will perhaps gain another cap lock shooter and that's always a good thing!
I’ve seen the guy a couple of times since and he still talks about ‘surviving’ his adventure with the flintlock. Unfortunate part is that he was getting in to it and didn’t have a concern until he saw the photographs. Doubt it would have made a difference if he was just sparking off the powder in the pan. He is a CMP M1 Garand shooter so he is is used to the thump from high power rifles. It was all about the flash from the flint pan. 50 grains of powder under a 58 cal RB in that gun is pretty easy on the shooter.
Note to self. No more high speed photographs of flintlocks with new shooters around.
Point with the photographs was that the guy had no issue with the pan flash until he saw it in the photos. Once that got in his head, he couldn’t stop thinking about it and was done.Do we really need to make a fuss about the flash and put it in the shooter's head?
Doubt different angle would have changed anything. Best example I could give would be trying to get someone who is afraid of snakes to hold or handle one. This guy was not going to put his face near that ‘fireball’. Honestly, I was more than surprised. Many first time flint shooters will shoot until you take the gun away from them.Did he try and take any photos from other angles to see actually what happened with the ignition ?
I’ve seen the guy a couple of times since and he still talks about ‘surviving’ his adventure with the flintlock. Unfortunate part is that he was getting in to it and didn’t have a concern until he saw the photographs. Doubt it would have made a difference if he was just sparking off the powder in the pan. He is a CMP M1 Garand shooter so he is is used to the thump from high power rifles. It was all about the flash from the flint pan. 50 grains of powder under a 58 cal RB in that gun is pretty easy on the shooter.
Note to self. No more high speed photographs of flintlocks with new shooters around.
Of course I don’t know what the guy was thinking. Can only comment on what he was saying and how he was acting. He said something about always wanting to shoot flintlocks and asked if I would let him try (he had seen me let others try in the past). I took him through the loading and firing process. He seemed excited after shooting a number of times, and wanted pictures to show buddies. I ‘assumed’ that next he would what me to take photos of him shooting, but we never got that far. Photography session was not my idea.You think he was "really getting into it"? Sounds to me like maybe he really wasn't all that interested, but didn't want to hurt your feelings, then used the photographs as his excuse to bow out of things without making an insult. People do funny things when it comes to getting out of situations they really don't want to be in.
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