gunnyr
40 Cal
Welcome from Iowa.
Hello all,
Im from central Illinois and grew up shooting muzzleloaders. I built a Lyman Great Plains rifle 15 years ago, then went to college and life got in the way. Wanting to get back into it. In the next year Im hoping to build a Pedersoli Pennsylvania rifle. Ive always been a percussion guy but Im debating on whether to get a flintlock or not. Ive never shot one and have limited knowledge of them, but I love learning new things. Anybody have any advice or tips?
Depending exactly where in central Illinois you can shoot with like-minded people from Leroy rifle and pistol club west of Wapella, IL they have a monthly blackpowder shoot, or blackpowder only at Prairieland Frontiersmen just south of Sullivan, IL. They have monthly shoots and other events.
Best place for history is a longer drive Fort de Chartres in southern IL home of the oldest building in Illinois and they have a monthly shoot there as well.
Probably others I am unaware of.
Welcome from northeast Illinois! Just a thought, you really might want to think about going with a kibler kit, you’d be much more likely to end up with a very high quality rifle as long as you follow the easy instructions. if you go with a pedersoli your chances of getting a decent lock are very slim. With my pedersoli, there is much more of a flash/fire delay, and Im lucky to shoot 5-10 times without having a failure to fire, whether it be flash in the pan or a failure to ignite priming charge. Pedersoli may make some decent percussion guns but with flintlocks, it is much more important to have a high quality lock and the production methods they use are not good for turning out High Quality Locks.
With my kibler guns I can easily shoot 50-100 times with one flint and the gun shoots every time, and there is no perceivable delay, Jim’s locks are wicked fast and extremely dependable. His kits are very easy to put together and look beautiful when finished nicely.
If you are just getting into flintlocks, and you get a pedersoli, it might needlessly scare you away from flintlocks for good. Don’t believe the old wives tale that flintlocks are not dependable, a flintlock can be just as dependable as any percussion gun, as long as it is made correctly, and kibler does just that.
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