:stir: West Virginia in the blood. The reason I am here is that I came upon a "free gift". Three muzzle loaders. A CVA double percussion 12 gage, never fired, a 50 cal. Navy Arms percussion rifle engraved "tribute to the American Pioneer" Montgomery Wards, Chicago, Ill, never fired, and this 50 cal. flintlock.
Have reloaded forever, own to many guns (wife), enjoy shooting rifle and pistols, really like 500 and 1,000 yard target shooting. USMC, Private Pilot, Electrical Engineer.
Apparently have become addicted to muzzle loading. Have researched the internet some, bought and read a bunch of books from Dixie Gun Works incuding, Lyman's Black Powder Hand Book and the Gunsmith of Grenville County.
Having a lot of reloading experience, along with a strong survival instinct, says to proceed carefully. I have a complete wood working shop, a small metal lathe, and lots of tools.
I have cleaned this gun with hot water ramrod plunger and oiled it carefully. The rifle and lock look good with little or no rust. The barrel by bore light looks good without any bulges or pitting. Have measured the external dimensions of the barrel with good results. It is a Hawken style with a 28 inch barrel with what appears visually to be a very slow twist. Plan to measure the twist soon.
The proof marks 700 Kiloponds/cm2 indicate it was proofed at 9,954 lb/in2. This indicates that light loads are called for which is not a problem with me. Putting them all into the some hole at 50 yards has more challenge than some 500 yard shots with the right equipment.
Now the question?? Never have shot this rifle. Should I proof test it?? If so, which of the many suggested approaches would be reasonable to proceed on knowing one would never knowingly exceed 10,000 psi using round ball and patch. Have ordered Lyman .490 and .495 molds. Will measure the exact bore/groove on both rifles and the shootgun before attempting to work up ball / patch / lube / powder combinations.
This forum is the only real source of expertise available to me. When the weather breaks plan to see if I can schedule a black powder shoot some where and continue the learning process.
Thanks for your responses.