To keep from splintering the stock, file a taper on the ends of the pins.
Yeah, that does not sound like a good situation. I guess I'd use the flushing nipple approach, but I've tried that on my own guns and didn't care for it (compared to just pulling the barrel off).But rifles/pistols that use a full tang barrel and have a long fore-stock "pinned" to the barrel risk damage to the stock if a barrel is removed.
Is like ... glued into the stock?
Just do a web search on bore butter and you can spend the next week reading all about this. There are two camps. Like many others, I've found that bore butter is not the way I want to go for the variety of reasons others have given.When I first started with muzzleloaders, I always used TC bore butter both on patches and to coat the bite after cleaning. Never had any issues with rust. Does nobody use this anymore and why?
Absolutely. I'm a Simple Green guy for guns, but use Dawn for my brass musical instruments. Green for guns; blue for brass?Water with a dash of dish washing soap is about the best black powder fouling solvent that I have found.
Old guns had a breech plug and tang as one piece. The hooked tang/breech was a very late eighteenth century. I’m thing patten in ‘96.Yeah, that does not sound like a good situation. I guess I'd use the flushing nipple approach, but I've tried that on my own guns and didn't care for it (compared to just pulling the barrel off).
What did people do in the old days? Did they have their own special nipples in the 18th century? And what's the relation to having a full tang barrel? Aren't hooked breech guns with long forestocks made that are pinned? And why choose a pin over a wedge? Is it a matter of aesthetics?
I have a Kentucky flinter and of course it has a pinned barrel. I bought a flush adapter that screws into the touch hole liner hole. It has a barbed end for a hose with a brass weight on it to keep it in the bucket of cleaning solution. This is a better way to do it than the clamp on style, at least I find it to be. Both can be found on the Track Of The Wolf website. I use a towel around the muzzle to keep solution from getting into the nose cap and wood. All that said, the last time I cleaned it, I didn't use a soapy water solution. With a breech scraper, copper brush and jag/patches I scrubbed the devil out of it with a petroleum based solvent. I did it until the patches came out clean. I scrubbed the lock with the same solution, hosed it down with wd-40 and blew the excess off with an air compressor. As an added protection, maybe seal the wood and nosecap with beeswax to help keep any errant solution from getting between the wood and barrel. My 2 cents, your milage may vary.I have always have BP rifles with a hook breach rifle making it easy to remove and clean. I recently bought a 32 cal full stock rifle with a barrel that can’t be removed. Shooting traditional BP. How do I clean it without ruining the full length stock. I’m used to using soapy water to clean my other rifles. Any suggestions
Check your buttstock. I once had Mowrey muzzleloader. To remove the barrel from the stock I had to remove 2 screws from the butt of the buttstock first, to remove the butt plate. Then I had to remove a long bolt that screwed from inside the buttstock into the barrel assembly. It was a bit of a pain, but it enabled me to remove the barrel.Technically it can be removed but appears I would have to remove it from the stock. Looks like the action and barrel are not meant to be taken apart. Just different fro the hook breach design I’m used to
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