ironeyes969
32 Cal
- Joined
- Jan 8, 2022
- Messages
- 12
- Reaction score
- 5
I spent the end of December hunting PA's flintlock season. I had an absolute blast with a borrowed fire storm. I've decided to buy my own flinty but my budget is under $500.
I spent the end of December hunting PA's flintlock season. I had an absolute blast with a borrowed fire storm. I've decided to buy my own flinty but my budget is under $500.
I would avoid the PA Pellet. They can be serviceable guns, but can take some effort to become reliable, and if you are only going to use it a few days a year…. Nothing worse than a potentially troublesome flintlock for a beginner. Read this thread for a primer on Traditions PA Pellets.I am a native Floridian and will likely only use it a few days a year when visiting my wife's family. Im trying very hard not to rush out and buy a rifle that I regret. I can get a wood stock tradition's pa pellet brand new for $450. Good, bad? I just dont know what a good deal is.
I'd recommend finding a used investarm flintlock. They are pretty decent performers. It is what I started on. In .50 or .54 cal you could have a dependable, though not the most historically accurate flintlock. If you are patient enough you may find a used Lyman close to your price range. You may also be able to find an older used Dixie Gun Works (Tennessee or SMR) thT are solid performers. If you were close I'd let you shoot my investarm.
Best advice is to have patience. Look around, ask questions, see what you find. I can appreciate your desire to hunt the late season in PA.
If your going to be up again and you are in eastern PA, message here. I'd be happy to let you try a variety of flintlock rifles to give you an idea what you might like.
I'd recommend finding a used investarm flintlock. They are pretty decent performers. It is what I started on. In .50 or .54 cal you could have a dependable, though not the most historically accurate flintlock. If you are patient enough you may find a used Lyman close to your price range. You may also be able to find an older used Dixie Gun Works (Tennessee or SMR) thT are solid performers. If you were close I'd let you shoot my investarm.
Best advice is to have patience. Look around, ask questions, see what you find. I can appreciate your desire to hunt the late season in PA.
If your going to be up again and you are in eastern PA, message here. I'd be happy to let you try a variety of flintlock rifles to give you an idea what you might like.
@ironeyes969 as broke mentioned I just bought the Traditions PA pellet.Do not buy that PA Pellet junk. Keep digging through these posts, you will find another new forum member who bought one recently, I seriously doubt he would recommend it......
Save your money. If it isn't going to be a regular shooter for you. Then you have lots of time before the next Pennsylvania flintlock season.
Just based on what I read here and on other forums, if I were looking for a flintlock without historical considerations but on a budget I'd be looking for a GPR.
@ironeyes969 as broke mentioned I just bought the Traditions PA pellet.
Trigger pull out of the box was about 30 lb and gritty, but you can adjust it.
It has permanent sling mounts so in order to clean the barrel properly, you have to take the sling apart to get it off the barrel. However I found a fairly simple work around for that as well.
It is drilled and tapped for a scope but why? The scope would have to be three and a half inches above the Barrel in order for the hammer to clear it.
The distance from the pan to the pellets requires that you put some 4f powder in the barrel prior to loading pellets.
I believe I can ultimately make this gun work, but there are a lot of things that leave you scratching your head!
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