+1I have never found Flintlocks confronting in any way. They do seem particularly amenable after a tickle with a pipe cleaner.
Personally I always pop a cap.
Swab!You "swap out the bore?" Well I guess changing barrels would eliminate any oil, assuming the new barrel is clean.
Back when I muzzleloader hunted (at least 13 years ago) I'd charge the barrel at home, put the weapon into its case, and put that into the trunk of the car. I did this the night before. I only capped when I reached my still hunting location.
I was taught to snap a percussion cap before loading for the first time to clear any moisture out of the barrel. I was thinking about this today in terms of hunting (it’s my first year hunting with a ML). I park at the landowners house, and I really don’t want to fire a cap in his driveway or in the field before I load for the morning hunt. I also don’t want to take a chance with a misfire due to wet powder. What is the general consensus on this practice?
Not required. Cap n’ball revolvers are inline ignition. Oops, did I just say that?? Anyhow, easily picked clean.What do the cap poppers do with cap and ball revolvers? Fire off 6 or 12 caps before loading?
How do you pick oil out of a nipple or chamber?Not required. Cap n’ball revolvers are inline ignition. Oops, did I just say that?? Anyhow, easily picked clean.
Walk
I'm quite sure that most don't put a cap on their hunting load until they are in the field. I put a cap on, put my little leather thing on top of the cap and lower the hammer on it when I'm in the field. When I pull the hammer back the fish line attached to the leather pulls it off the nipple and I shoot. The worst miss firing I ever had was when I reloaded my percussion after missing a shot at a white tail doe. I reloaded using my friends homemade patch lube made of mutton fat, needs foot oil and what ever else and didn't see a suitable deer for three days. Then that giant Whitetail Buck stood up at 50 yards and all that shot was the cap. After trying three more caps, I gave up, and being I didn't have a nipple wrench with me, it was a long trail back to get one. Remove said nipple put in a few grains of powder, reassembled and of course it shot. Two lessons, second shot doesn't always work and beware homemade patch Lube without a separator between ball and powder.You "swap out the bore?" Well I guess changing barrels would eliminate any oil, assuming the new barrel is clean.
Back when I muzzleloader hunted (at least 13 years ago) I'd charge the barrel at home, put the weapon into its case, and put that into the trunk of the car. I did this the night before. I only capped when I reached my still hunting location.
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