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Do you shoot old "Originals"?

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Do you regularly shoot old original guns? 1700s? 1800s? Pictures?

1850s German Jaeger .54 cal.
 

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I do too! My Great Great Great Grandfathers .35 caliber percussion rifle from 1843. I take it out at least once a season to hunt squirrels with. the breech area is pitted due to a powder charge left in it for over 100 years, but she still shoots 1.5" groups at 35 yards.
 

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Yes,
Double flint C 1815, 19 bore.
DSCN2531.JPG

W'm Bailes turn off 22 bore and a Smith 17 bore pistol,
(1740's and 1820's respectively)
DSCN1564.JPG

DSCN1632 - Copy.JPG

One of the Bailes and Smith as they came...
Harrison plus Rich a.jpg


Prichard, 1840's, etc.
dscn3254_125.jpg


Note that two of the pistols were converted to percussion.
An owner thought enough about them to have them updated to percussion, so to my mind should not be converted back.
To do so takes away a great part of their history.

Best,
R.
 
I do too! My Great Great Great Grandfathers .35 caliber percussion rifle from 1843. I take it out at least once a season to hunt squirrels with. the breech area is pitted due to a powder charge left in it for over 100 years, but she still shoots 1.5" groups at 35 yards.
OH MY! thats a very very nice old rifle! Would love to find one like that in a pawn shop someday!
 
I do too! My Great Great Great Grandfathers .35 caliber percussion rifle from 1843. I take it out at least once a season to hunt squirrels with. the breech area is pitted due to a powder charge left in it for over 100 years, but she still shoots 1.5" groups at 35 yards.
Man that’s so sad to see. Built by some amateur in 1843 that didn’t know the lock molding was too big and metal was always engraved 😂
 
I do too! My Great Great Great Grandfathers .35 caliber percussion rifle from 1843. I take it out at least once a season to hunt squirrels with. the breech area is pitted due to a powder charge left in it for over 100 years, but she still shoots 1.5" groups at 35 yards.
I have heard of folks using a wad or some inert filler such as cornmeal to move a ball farther away from a pitted breach area to improve accuracy with no ill effects.
 

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