Replace it wood or delrin it's your choice
The U.S. Model 1842 was manufactured with an iron rammer. Apples to Oranges.My Springfield .69 smoothbore (actually my pop’s that he let’s me hang on to) has a steel ramrod. It’s a reproduction, so I guess it may not be historically accurate, but it makes sense to have a sturdy ramrod that won’t break in battle I suppose. Not sure why to NOT get a steel RR.
I use spit patches most of the time, when it starts getting hard to load the next patch is a little wetter and problem solved.So it got progressively harder to load the next round. The same thing happened when in a pecan bottom and the squirrels were everywhere.
Hence you ended up pounding the last few rounds down the barrel,
But it is "nasty modern stuff which they wouldn't have had back in the day" so it would REALLY upset the traditionalists ;-))))Best ramrod modern ramrod material is 304 aluminum, it’s light and flexible, can be blackened to not look like aluminum.
That Titebond Ultimate says it's a 4000 lb. strength bond. It's darker color that the lighter Titebond.Well guys I had a terrible day at the range. The rifle shot great but I snapped the ramrod in the cold. It is not in two pieces. Just held together very thinly. Will good wood glue work? I always hear that the glued spot is stronger than the original wood but I want to be really sure before I put the safety of my hand/wrist at stake. I have a range rod, I just need the rod on the gun to be strong enough for use for reloading while hunting. Thanks!
But it is "nasty modern stuff which they wouldn't have had back in the day" so it would REALLY upset the traditionalists ;-)))) It is difficult for some people to grasp the fact that for many of us tradition is important. These people often post insulting and derogatory posts about traditionalists. It is a kind of reverse snobbery in my opinion. I suspect that many of these "modernists" would be just as happy with a stainless steel, plastic stocked in-line. In any case, I have been using good hickory rods for nearly seventy years and have never broken one. I was taught the right way to use a muzzleloader and to respect traditions.
Good advice. This was one of the first rules I learned 50 years ago. I have since watched videos of guys grabbing the rod a foot or more above the muzzle. I cringe as the rod bows.
I’m not saying the OP did that because I know there’s the possibility of a weak spot in any wood but this is always a good rule to pass on in case a new shooter has never been told.
No one has mentioned the old “soak you hickory RR in kerosene for a month or two”
Is there anything to that?
I’ve soaked a couple and have some untreated.
Haven’t broken one (yet), but I’ve always taken short strokes.
I love Titebond but I would never glue a broken RR or arrow shaft.
Bad wood is bad no matter how good the glue is!
Seems like a few years ago the Bevel Brothers tested kerosene soaked ramrods and found no improvement other than it kept mosquitoes away!! Lol.No one has mentioned the old “soak you hickory RR in kerosene for a month or two”
Is there anything to that?
I’ve soaked a couple and have some untreated.
Haven’t broken one (yet), but I’ve always taken short strokes.
I love Titebond but I would never glue a broken RR or arrow shaft.
Bad wood is bad no matter how good the glue is!
Great post!Dad told me in the winter when farm work slowed they would carve shovel, hoe, hammer and axe handles and store them in the loft. I'm sure 100 years earlier men would carve ramrods and have several spares ready to go. Otherwise it would be like shopping for a spare tire after you have a flat.
As a kid plinking, (and as an adult), I didn't spend much time swabbing the barrel until back home. I never heard of a Range Rod until about 10 years ago. Again, there was no internet to tell me how wrong i was.
So it got progressively harder to load the next round. The same thing happened when in a pecan bottom and the squirrels were everywhere.
Hence you ended up pounding the last few rounds down the barrel, and even using short strokes it was hard on a piece of long slender wood.
I am surprised that EVERYONE hasn't broken at least One ramrod in their life. I despise metal or heaven forbid, plastic ramrod in a non-martial muzzleloader. But that's just me.
The old saying " A ship is safest in the harbor, but that's not what they're made for" comes to mind.
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