Carl Davis said:My first muzzleloader was flint and it fired the first time I loaded it.
Me too. :thumbsup:
Carl Davis said:My first muzzleloader was flint and it fired the first time I loaded it.
:2 My first B/P gun was a flintlock, and I've never regretted it. I was(and still am) a slow learner and there wasn't many people shooting them(at least that I knew of) near where I lived. All that I learned I learned the hard way. But that's what made it all so rewarding. I'm still learning today(probably because I forgot a lot). For me, it's been a real love affair. Don't let the idea that it's too difficult scare you away from them. :vGA stringnsmoke said:I'm about to purchase my 1st BP rifle. I've shot both traditonal percussion and the newer inline rifles, but never a flint. I've made my mind up to get a Lyman Great Plains in .54, and thought mainly about percussion. Knowing that I'm going to shoot balls and patches, do I go "balls to the wall" and get a flint. How much trouble are they, and how often do you encounter problems such as miss fires?
Finnwolf said:GA,
Don't let anyone blow sunshine up your kilt about flintlocks. Some people will tell you they never misfire if you "take care of 'em right" and if "you know what you're doing". I've been hunting with flintlocks for over 20 years in a state that used to allow ONLY flintlocks shooting patched roundball.
I've used only T/C guns but lots of friends have GPRs. Both guns share a similar coil spring lock and both have had pooer geometry in lock design and poor metalurgy in the components (mostly the frizzen). Many times, the touch hole is also poorly placed. All this considered, these guns will still fire about 9 times in 10, but they WILL misfire. There is a reason that most guns were converted to percussion in the generation after it was developed. There is a reason that all the world's military powers converted to percussion as quickly as they did.
I've only recently started with cap guns but I have yet to have a misfire in nearly 2 years. I now enjoy going to the range without the aggravation of having misfires and the flinch I developed from years of shooting T/Cs is nearly gone.
I spend a lot of time taking care of all my BP guns, making sure they are clean, making sure the flints are good and mounted properly. I always take care of my pan powder and keep it fresh and dry. I know how to protect my flintlock when the weather is wet. Still, expect a 1 in 10 failure rate and some slowfires that will cause you to miss your target.
I've missed 3 nice deer over the years because my gun wouldn't fire. If this level of performance wouldn't bother you, then you are right for a flintlock. If you have any doubt, get the capper. I'll still hunt with a flintlock, partly because it's the law and partly 'cause I love it but that flintlock is now a custom made gun with a Siler lock. I know it will still misfire on occasion but not as much as a production gun.
Don't believe me, borrow a GPR if you know someone who has one or just go to the range with him and see for yourself. Don't let the manly flintlock police push you into a decision
Finnwolf said:There is a reason that all the world's military powers converted to percussion as quickly as they did.
nchawkeye said:Finnwolf...If all you've ever owned were factory flintlocks then you ain't never really owned a flintlock... :grin:
nchawkeye said:"..If all you've ever owned were factory flintlocks then you ain't never really owned a flintlock..."
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