- Joined
- Jun 13, 2023
- Messages
- 178
- Reaction score
- 481
I’m looking forward to getting it out. It sparks really good, which is a good sign.Looks great! I have 2 USA made, a 45 and a 50. Both are fantastic shooters. My 50 loves 60g fff with .018 pillow patch lubed with mink oil.
That’s great. Both of mine are percussion. I had problems with the lock on the 50 and replaced it with an L&R RPL lock. What a difference! They also have flintlock RPL for the mountain rifle should yours become troublesome.I’m looking forward to getting it out. It sparks really good, which is a good sign.
That’s really good to know. I think the lock is “ok” but and L&R would take it over the top! Do you have to drill and tap a lock from them?That’s great. Both of mine are percussion. I had problems with the lock on the 50 and replaced it with an L&R RPL lock. What a difference! They also have flintlock RPL for the mountain rifle should yours become troublesome.
That's awesome! Im going to try and find the flint version.No, it took me all of 10 minutes to fit the lock to the gun. I was shocked it fit so well. I then polished the internals and browned it to match the rest of the furniture.
I bought three USA MR over the years. Gave the .45 to my older son when he was strong enough to hold it. Have one .50 that has never been fired. The .50 I shoot has somewhere between 70-75 pounds of Goex through it, 7000+ rounds. Still use the original triggers and percussion lock with no mechanical problems in 40+ years.the CVA percussion is far and away a much better lock then the L&R ! the only advantage the L&R has is parts availability other then that the CVA is hands down a better lock
Interesting! Mine has no origin marks at all on it.@Caleb Foster, the CVA Mountain Rifle with the made in USA barrel will be stamped to identify that the barrel was made in the USA.View attachment 333222
It may be a replacement barrel, the stock has the 4 screw patch box and hex shaped ramrod thimbles that were only on the “made in USA” barrels.Interesting! Mine has no origin marks at all on it.
very interesting!It may be a replacement barrel, the stock has the 4 screw patch box and hex shaped ramrod thimbles that were only on the “made in USA” barrels.
You could grab an L&R lock! That would send it over the top!Nice looking MR! I picked one up from the for-sale section here back in the fall and cleaned it up. It still has the original lock but when I took it down and to clean it, I compared the parts to a Traditions lock that I have. Some of those parts look to be identical but I could be wrong. I do have the hammer from that Traditions lock on the gun now to see if that fixes my sticking cap issue.
Thanks I’m a little addictedNice selection of hawks you have there.
my first muzzleloader is a CVA kentucky kit I built it has the same lock as the mountain rifle and it has over 20k rounds through it and syill shoots clover leaf's at 100 yds off the bench with some body that can see that farI bought three USA MR over the years. Gave the .45 to my older son when he was strong enough to hold it. Have one .50 that has never been fired. The .50 I shoot has somewhere between 70-75 pounds of Goex through it, 7000+ rounds. Still use the original triggers and percussion lock with no mechanical problems in 40+ years.
That's interesting as my Traditions hammers have the sticking cap issue.Nice looking MR! I picked one up from the for-sale section here back in the fall and cleaned it up. It still has the original lock but when I took it down and to clean it, I compared the parts to a Traditions lock that I have. Some of those parts look to be identical but I could be wrong. I do have the hammer from that Traditions lock on the gun now to see if that fixes my sticking cap issue.
I have found that I have less of this with hotshot nipples than any of the others also I have found opening the notch in the hammer helpsThat's interesting as my Traditions hammers have the sticking cap issue.
Walt
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