I shot and primarily hunted with flintlock rifles for over 25 years.
I have read a lot over the last year or so and this has made me decide to relate some facts, as I learned them and put them to use through the years.
This has nothing to do with what anyone did historically or any other time. All it addresses is what I know to be a fact through my usage.
I've never shared this before. It just seems to me that a lot of new flint shooters are having problems they don't need to have.
First, I attended to getting the right sparks by changing the angle between the frizzen and cock (or anvil and hammer if you choose.)
You might have to half sole the frizzen.
The most important thing I did after this was to make a touch hole bushing (liner) that was coned from the inside to within 1/8 or less of the outside. If you can't see a grain of powder looking through the touch hole, you didn't cone enough.
The hole must be where the bottom edge of the hole is even with "water level" of the pan so that with a FULL pan of powder, and the frizzen closed, the hole remains above the level of the powder.
If the original hole isn't in this position, then make a liner out of an allen screw, cone it and drill a 1/16" hole "off center" and cut a shallow slot so you can screw it in and adjust it where the bottom of the touch hole is where it needs to be. This may require you to file a little off if it sticks out some from the barrel
Don't sweat no shoulder on the bushing, it'll stay in place fine.
If tune the lock thusly, you can carry the gun in any position all day and then hold it upside down and fire it. If it doesn't go off perfectly then you forgot to prime. (heh heh)
This isn't an opinion, that's just the way it is.
With this setup, you can always use a full pan and have instant ignition with the shortest distance between flash and powder, taking maximum advantage of convection and the 1/16 touch hole is FASTER than larger ones and helps keep dew out.
Never cone on the outside. It only increases the distance the flash has to travel.
I have read a lot over the last year or so and this has made me decide to relate some facts, as I learned them and put them to use through the years.
This has nothing to do with what anyone did historically or any other time. All it addresses is what I know to be a fact through my usage.
I've never shared this before. It just seems to me that a lot of new flint shooters are having problems they don't need to have.
First, I attended to getting the right sparks by changing the angle between the frizzen and cock (or anvil and hammer if you choose.)
You might have to half sole the frizzen.
The most important thing I did after this was to make a touch hole bushing (liner) that was coned from the inside to within 1/8 or less of the outside. If you can't see a grain of powder looking through the touch hole, you didn't cone enough.
The hole must be where the bottom edge of the hole is even with "water level" of the pan so that with a FULL pan of powder, and the frizzen closed, the hole remains above the level of the powder.
If the original hole isn't in this position, then make a liner out of an allen screw, cone it and drill a 1/16" hole "off center" and cut a shallow slot so you can screw it in and adjust it where the bottom of the touch hole is where it needs to be. This may require you to file a little off if it sticks out some from the barrel
Don't sweat no shoulder on the bushing, it'll stay in place fine.
If tune the lock thusly, you can carry the gun in any position all day and then hold it upside down and fire it. If it doesn't go off perfectly then you forgot to prime. (heh heh)
This isn't an opinion, that's just the way it is.
With this setup, you can always use a full pan and have instant ignition with the shortest distance between flash and powder, taking maximum advantage of convection and the 1/16 touch hole is FASTER than larger ones and helps keep dew out.
Never cone on the outside. It only increases the distance the flash has to travel.