For those of you who swab between shots, exactly how do you do it? Do you use one swab with water, do you follow the wet swab with a dry patch, do you use something other than water, or do you do sometimes else? Just how do you do it?
For those of you who swab between shots, exactly how do you do it? Do you use one swab with water, do you follow the wet swab with a dry patch, do you use something other than water, or do you do sometimes else? Just how do you do it?
remember CAPT. HOOK, who lost his arm at an event in VERMONT, 40 yrs. ago at a public event, his name is JIM DESOTTI, a great friend of mine. he is still a reinactor.Quite real. I have seen it happen. It is just one of the reasons you ALWAYS keep the muzzle pointed in a safe direction.
Me too.I'm so slow that any spark residing in my rifle bore would have to have a half life of around 30 minutes.
Not necessarily a pleasant subject but...
I understand that cannoneers of old and maybe new have a chance of a discharge while loading powder into the bore due to a remaining spark from wadding or whatever hence the mop but what are the chances of our firearms accidentally discharging a powder load?
I'm sure it can be something always on our minds which is a good reason not to be over the bore with any body parts.
Discussion?
wm
This was how Walter Cline died. Yes, that Walter Cline, father of modern muzzleloading, namesake of the range in Friendship, and author of the famous book, The Muzzle-Loading Rifle, Then and Now. I had wanted this book for many decades, and finally found a beautiful, leather-bound copy in like-new condition, for about what you would expect to pay for a paperback these days. I was reading in it a couple of nights ago, and to my great surprise, discovered the first edition of the book (1942) had been published posthumously. Mr. Cline had died the previous year from a wound sustained while "tamping the load" in a .44 caliber muzzleloading rifle. His obituary indicated there was a cap on the nipple. It was unclear if this was a "cook off," or if the hammer had been cocked, and then dropped on the cap during loading.The only case i'm familiar with happened to a guy who insisted on capping prior to loading.
I've seen videos of guys blowing down the barrel, in my mind that would only fan the flame rather than put it out?
That's wrong ! But just plain funnyDischarge while loading!
I thought you were ill for a moment!
I tend to use my co2 stuck ball remover. I figure a quick squirt of co2 will go well in putting out any latent embers.In many cases, blowing down the barrel isn't that dangerous except for the vary rare instance it becomes very dangerous. I'd rather avoid blowing down the barrel. I can accept that my reloading procedure doesn't have that cool factor. The benefit isn't as good as a wipe of the bore with a moist patch.
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