Grayson Palmer
32 Cal
I know this first question has been asked a million times, and the answer is "it's up to you". But I want to ask anyway. I'm new to sidelock muzzleloaders. Built my first Lyman GPR percussion .54 caliber last year. Have shot it maybe 50 rounds or so. Love it! I did get an R.E. Davis trigger for it and a GPR peep sight. Shoots great!
So...now I want a flintlock, especially with percussion caps being hard to find. Which one do I get and which caliber? Do I stay with .54 and keep it simple? Or get a .45 and enjoy a smaller caliber that's still big enough for deer? I MUST have a peep sight, so I hope one can be made/fit for most brands/styles.
And finally, in case anyone ELSE had this problem besides Mike Beliveau and me... In my GPR I could shoot 5 rounds before it became impossible to load. First round seated easy. Second wasn't bad. Third was hard to seat the bullet. Fourth was really hard to get it down the barrel. Fifth was all I could do. I did no cleaning between rounds, but didn't think that should be necessary. I watched Mike B. use a scrubbing pad to fix the same issue so it must not be normal to have to clean between rounds.
Anyway, I bought some JB Bore Cleaning Compound and polished the bore with that on a cleaning patch a couple hundred strokes. It didn't really feel like I was doing much, but the patch came out black after several strokes. After my first round of JB Bore paste, I shot the GPR again and it hadn't helped much. Actually, I think it helped but the barrel must have still been rough the last third of the barrel toward the end of the barrel...that's where the round would get really hard to push through when loading.
So I repeated the JB Bore paste treatment again. And went shooting a couple times after that. It worked! I never get to a point where the round is hard to seat. I don't know how many rounds I shot but about 10 or maybe 12 shots in a row. No issues seating the round. Nice and smooth just like it was the first or second shot every time.
So...now I want a flintlock, especially with percussion caps being hard to find. Which one do I get and which caliber? Do I stay with .54 and keep it simple? Or get a .45 and enjoy a smaller caliber that's still big enough for deer? I MUST have a peep sight, so I hope one can be made/fit for most brands/styles.
And finally, in case anyone ELSE had this problem besides Mike Beliveau and me... In my GPR I could shoot 5 rounds before it became impossible to load. First round seated easy. Second wasn't bad. Third was hard to seat the bullet. Fourth was really hard to get it down the barrel. Fifth was all I could do. I did no cleaning between rounds, but didn't think that should be necessary. I watched Mike B. use a scrubbing pad to fix the same issue so it must not be normal to have to clean between rounds.
Anyway, I bought some JB Bore Cleaning Compound and polished the bore with that on a cleaning patch a couple hundred strokes. It didn't really feel like I was doing much, but the patch came out black after several strokes. After my first round of JB Bore paste, I shot the GPR again and it hadn't helped much. Actually, I think it helped but the barrel must have still been rough the last third of the barrel toward the end of the barrel...that's where the round would get really hard to push through when loading.
So I repeated the JB Bore paste treatment again. And went shooting a couple times after that. It worked! I never get to a point where the round is hard to seat. I don't know how many rounds I shot but about 10 or maybe 12 shots in a row. No issues seating the round. Nice and smooth just like it was the first or second shot every time.