I sure hope that was 50-yards ...I use the French style paper cartridge ... got up to 15 shots before any resistance was felt. Got a 4 to 5 inch group at 5 yds. measured.
I sure hope that was 50-yards ...I use the French style paper cartridge ... got up to 15 shots before any resistance was felt. Got a 4 to 5 inch group at 5 yds. measured.
Maybe, but that happens with normal goobers shooting too. Embers will be there. Things happen. Don’t put your hand over the end of the rammer. Just don’t.As I previously mentioned, At mates club.
“The ramrod went through a shooters hand, through the tin roof never to be seen again”
Daft priming first , but what’s a lost hand in the heat of battle.
Yes it was, old age seems to be taking it's toll.I sure hope that was 50-yards ...
This gun doesn't have a set trigger.On the second or third load, I thought I heard a double click of the **** before that pan was primed and cartridge rammed down.
Dear god, I hope that I heard wrong.
In a hunting situation you use a "hammer stall" (leather frizzen cover) on the frizzen and don't charge the pan until you get to the area you expect to hunt. In most states, a flintlock with powder in the pan (charged pan) is considered loaded. Then charge the pan and put it half ****, which is the safety position and place the leather "hammer stall" over the frizzen so that even if half-**** fails, there's no way to generate a spark to light the powder. When you have your target, you flick off the hammer stall that is typically died to the trigger guard so you don't lose it, pull the **** back to full **** position, aim and fire.That would solve the danger, but you are slower now.
-Go to the pan and prime (say cover is on already and the gun is unloaded at the start of battle, hunting, etc. Maybe it was for battlefield situations, but I doubt it, and a hunter with an unloaded rifle is going to go hungry).
-Go to the muzzle, load the ball.
-Go back to the frizen to take off cover, and go to full ****.
-FIRE……but now what.
a) put the cover back on and repeat the process, b) leave the cover off from now on which only keeps it safer for the first shot.
I wonder how many people got their faces blown off on accident from their gun or the guy next to them.
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