Mike in FL
50 Cal.
Wow.
D@mn !!a properly jug choked muzzle loader will shoot tighter patterns than a modern gun. I have built guns that will take turks at 50 yards. And you can still shoot round ball out of them. I've been doing g this stuff for three decades.
BUT, with respect, if said jug choke is on a flintlock, why not use a modern gun.edit? I can understand those hunters using a scoped inline percussion guns because their motive is the extra hunting time, but choking a traditional smoothie that uses a flint for ignition sort of defeats the reason for buying an expensive flintlock fowler. I mean to ask if the historic value is not destroyed with that improvement. Although it can't be seen, it's still there in the barrel and on your mind. sort of like a Snickers bar in your possible bag or s synthetic ramrod or plastic shot cups. I'm referring to a hunter's actual time in the woods, not his preparation for the outing or the vehicle he used to get there.D@mn !!
You sound awesome !!BUT, with respect, if said jug choke is on a flintlock, why not use a modern gun.edit? I can understand those hunters using a scoped inline percussion guns because their motive is the extra hunting time, but choking a traditional smoothie that uses a flint for ignition sort of defeats the reason for buying an expensive flintlock fowler. I mean to ask if the historic value is not destroyed with that improvement. Although it can't be seen, it's still there in the barrel and on your mind. sort of like a Snickers bar in your possible bag or s synthetic ramrod or plastic shot cups. I'm referring to a hunter's actual time in the woods, not his preparation for the outing or the vehicle he used to get there.
That's just me though. I try hard to not have anything about my person that a woodsman in 1740 didn't have. For me, when I walk into the woods and get out of sight of my truck, I am in the 18th Century. Ain't I weird?
That's a beautiful gun and bird, WOW!!!Another jug choke suggestion here
Here is a load I developed at 25 yards with my Kibler .58
View attachment 216356View attachment 216357
And yes, it’s highly effective on gobblers. This was from a couple days ago.View attachment 216358View attachment 216359
Yes! It CAN be done without resorting to the not traditional choke. Choking your flintlock is an unnecessary shortcut to achieving what turkey hunters seem to need. Spend some time and powder and components at the range. To choke a flintlock smooth bore is sacrilege. Not really, but you know what I mean. If you need a choke, get a modern gun, because changing from traditional is the same thing.I posted this already, but this was out of my 50 cal flintlock smooth rifle, no choke. The load was 40 grs 3f, lubed Durofelt wads, 3 thin card wads, brown paper shot cup holding 50 grs of #4 shot, thin overshot card, at 20 paces. Clay pigeon for reference. That's a turkey load.View attachment 280735
I don't see it as historically correct for most of the muzzleloading period either.I don't understand those that insist on being historically correct thinking chokes are okay, but plastic shot cups are a no no.
Robin
Please don't misunderstand because I'm for everyone doing what they please as far as PC goes, but i personally feel that anything we do that fundamentally changes our flintlock guns to change or improve how they perform defeats the purpose of doing it like our forefathers did. Hidden from view or not, it is "cheating." BUT, I myself do some thing that make it EASIER, but not functionally different. An example is pre-loaded load components that keep me from rummaging through my bag for stuff. My justification is that a second shot at a turkey is seldom if ever possible and that faster reloading doesn't help me succeed. Chokes for someone familiar with flintlock smoothbores know that choking drastically improves their pattern and range. Might as well use a modern shotgun because choking a muzzleloader means you cannot honestly afterwards say or think you did it with a flintlock just like they did back then, because you did not. All that said, it is your hunt and you are entitled do go at it the way YOU want to.I don't see it as historically correct for most of the muzzleloading period either.
I guess the argument could be made that choke was at least becoming available at a time while original muzzleloaders were still in use. Plastic anything, much less wads/shotcups didn't come about until well into the cartridge era.
Also, I think for some folks, something like a jug choke is like hiding your modern prescription pills in a perios container at a historical event. The pills are a modern solution to an age old problem, but they aren't hc/pc,,,, the container hides them while you still get the benefit. A choke isn't visible to the public, or most fellow history buffs, but improves the guns performance to deal with the modern hunting situation. While cylinder bore guns can be loaded to shoot effective turkey killing patterns, the range will still be quite limited. This isn't an insurmountable hurdle of hunting private land someplace where the birds are not heavily pressured. I don't think our turkey hunting situation is the same as it was in the 1700's/1800's, I also don't think there was the same passionate dedicated turkey hunting then. While there os a brief period in the spring wherein the birds seem almost stupid and will come in to a good call,,, they have also been "educated" over time and will run from a poor call or the wrong call. Their desire to breed doesn't negate their keen eyesight, or the suspiciousness of birds that have been shot at before. On essence, I don't think getting wild turkeys to withing cylinder bore muzzleloader ranges is as easy as it might have been 200 years ago. The choke deals with this in a manner that is relevant to the end of the muzzleloading period and without a shot pouch full of plastic.
If you want to be PC or hc you need to walk to your hunting destination or ride a horse. You shouldn't be buying your powder online or using this online forum to obtain information. You should only talk to people you meet on your travels. No cell phone maps or GPS. Surely people shooting powder from overseas was not hc... Swiss? I think not.Please don't misunderstand because I'm for everyone doing what they please as far as PC goes, but i personally feel that anything we do that fundamentally changes our flintlock guns to change or improve how they perform defeats the purpose of doing it like our forefathers did. Hidden from view or not, it is "cheating." BUT, I myself do some thing that make it EASIER, but not functionally different. An example is pre-loaded load components that keep me from rummaging through my bag for stuff. My justification is that a second shot at a turkey is seldom if ever possible and that faster reloading doesn't help me succeed. Chokes for someone familiar with flintlock smoothbores know that choking drastically improves their pattern and range. Might as well use a modern shotgun because choking a muzzleloader means you cannot honestly afterwards say or think you did it with a flintlock just like they did back then, because you did not. All that said, it is your hunt and you are entitled do go at it the way YOU want to.
If this isn't the dumbest,,, way too often repeated argument,,, against historical accuracy ,, I'm not sure what is. So sick of hearing/reading it I want to puke.If you want to be PC or hc you need to walk to your hunting destination or ride a horse. You shouldn't be buying your powder online or using this online forum to obtain information.
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