- Joined
- Jan 31, 2009
- Messages
- 13,055
- Reaction score
- 7,311
Good pictures of recovered patches would give the centuries of experience on this forum some hard data for a diagnosis. The minds here don't always agree but they have been around the horn.
Olive oil works very well, been using it for years and I also leave my rifle loaded for up to a month at a time.The "kit", May not have the breech/tang imposition set properly, a very common issue. The tang needs to be fully set against the wood stock with free and complete tang lock-up.
Olive oil,, sure, nothing wrong there, Until the patches are dripping oil when ya load'm,, and the linen is from an old shirt.
Good idea.
That's an absolute misconception. it doesn't work like that.
What I'm getting at is we're here to help ya,, but actual detail will help us help you.
Nothing wrong with learning at all.
Experience tells us your rifle should have much better results,, hang in there,, let's figure it out,
Dear all
I got a traditions deerhunter .50 percussion kit but my shooting results aren't good enough for me
I am using 60-70 grains of elephant black powder and from 20 meters , all I am obtaining is flyers around the target (round paper, 20cm)
Since I can shoot well with another gun (Cabela's traditional hawken. 50), I think the problem is not me.
By now, I am thinking that the problems could be:
4. Too thick patches, preventing the ball get in full contact with rifling.
Filing down the front sight will raise the point of impact.Keep in mind a new gun should be shooting high. They make the sights that way for solid sights so you can adjust them by filing down the front sight when you find where you want to be on target at.
Hahaha..I have not heard the closed door expression since my Grandfather passed. 42years ago.Tried elephant black powder once. The only way I could hit the broad side of a barn was if I was inside with the doors closed. Try Goex or other brands...
Brain fart moment, got it backwards. Or upside down.Filing down the front sight will raise the point of impact.
It is the patch thickness and tightness of the weave that is important. If the patch diameter is too large, you can always trim it at the muzzle.Hi, one doubt.
I'm using squared olive oil lubed patches from an old shirt (I'm out of store bought beeswax round patches).
Would anyone please tell me what would be a correct/good/fair circumference of lubed patches to shoot a .50 rifle?
So I can produce a good amount of equal size round patches from different fabrics, all of them with the same circumference, leaving the squared patches just for use with cleaning jag. (LoL)
Thanks
I think this is your main problem. First of all is the shirt 100% cotton? Second of all the shirt material is probably too thin and blowing through causing erratic flight.I'm using squared olive oil lubed patches from an old shirt
For the patch diameter, this is simple : ~1,00" is good for a .50 Cal...I would appreciate if anyone could suggest a good patch diameter for a .50 rifle, so I can use a punch to make all of it the same diameter
Enter your email address to join: