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Help! How to protect flint and lock from snow?

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JelloStorm

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I was hoping to dodge this bullet, but I don't think I'll be that lucky. Tomorrow is first day of Flintlock here in PA and I'm in the north east where we'll have some wind and snowfall tomorrow.

This will be my first time hunting flintlock and I wasn't prepared to have to protect the lock from moisture.

What can I use around the house to make something tonight?? I don't have any leather so, gotta use old every day household items.

Any help is appreciated. Good luck tomorrow to my fellow PA flintlock brethren! Try to save me some deer tomorrow if you're hunting in Luzurne county. :grin:
 
Have a shammy you use on cars? Or a piece of plyable leather? Even a piece of canvas with melted beeswax on it will do in a pinch. Make a piece large enough to cover the lock held on with a leather tie or shoe string. Make it so it's quickly removable when you see a deer.

I really haven't found a need for one in bad weather as I always just kept the lock under my coat.
 
Around the house-saran wrap, or aluminum foil, or waxed paper. In the woods- keep the lock under your armpit is what I do.
 
Keep the muzzle down lower than the lock at all times (with a piece of masking tape over the muzzle to keep from picking up snow).

Keep your lock area up under your coat near your warm dry body and refresh the prime periodically (every 45-60 minutes depending on the humidity).

Hope you tag one !
 
Ok, I think I may have solved it.

I took three layers of plastic wrap and put this "camo form wrap" my wife got me for Christmas over it (taped fast w/ regular tape). This stuff only sticks to itself and is silent unlike velcro.

Made about a 1' by 10" cover, wrapped it around and used two strips of that camo wrap as release strips.

Hope this works!
 
Only if the gun will be kept in the unheated garage, or out in the car/truck. You don't want to take a warm barrel from the house into the cold, and have moisture condense inside the barrel.

Be sure to clean and dry the barrel of oil from storage. Use alcohol to dissolve the oil and grease, so it can be poured out of the barrel. Now dry the barrel with a cleaning patch.

Then put a very THIN coat of oil on a cleaning patch, and run it down the barrel to lightly oil the barrel. That prevents rust, but is not so much as to foul your powder charge. I stop a few inches above the breech plug, so there is a bare area where the powder charge sits, in the back of the barrel, and where the PRB will be seated. I like to grease the bore with a greased cleaning patch AFTER seating the ball, to protect the barrel from rusting during the night and hunt the next day.

Put good tape over the muzzle to keep snow out of the barrel. The Air in front of the PRB will blow the tape off the muzzle before the Ball reaches the muzzle. ( Don't block your front sight with that tape.) I put a toothpick in my TH so that no moisture can get into the barrel to my powder charge. I usually remove the toothpick, and save it in a pocket in my pouch.

Consider soaking a cleaning patch in alcohol( I carry a small bottle of alcohol in my pouch when hunting in below 32 Degrees F. weather) and placing in half in the pan, and the other half covering the TH and leaning up over the barrel. Then close the frizzen to hold the cleaning patch against the Th. The evaporation of the alcohol will draw any moisture that has gotten into the powder charge, out through the TH. You may have to renew the alcohol in the patch every couple of hours, but its not a big deal.

Keep that lock up under your arm, and you should have no problem with snow getting into the lock. You generally will have time to prime the pan when you hear a deer or see a deer heading your way. In snow, deer tend to move slowly unless they are scared by someone or pushed. The air is so dry their sense of smell is not as effective, so they tend to move slowly stopping often to listen, and look, to compensate for their diminished sense of smell. That gives hunters the time to prime their locks.

Or, of course, you can do as others have suggested, and I have done on days with better weather, I prime my pan, and check it every half hour. If its beginning to crust, I change the prime. I use to use only 4Fg powder for my prime, but lately, I have begun to prime with whatever is down the barrel, and eliminate carrying an extra horn. Both 3Fg and 2Fg powders ignite fast enough that it makes little practical difference in a hunting scenario. :thumbsup:
 
...you're pretty close to Cox's or Dixon's shops... ya might want to drive in and pick up a cover (cow's knee) on your lunch break... and with the harsh weather headed your way, you may have more fun in either of their shops than outside... personally, my favorite hunting spot is the nearest diner with banana cream pie & coffee... :thumbsup:
 
bob4st said:
...you're pretty close to Cox's or Dixon's shops... ya might want to drive in and pick up a cover (cow's knee) on your lunch break...


Hah. Dixons is about an hour away. Not sure where Cox is, never heard of them. Do they have a website?
 
I use a zip-lock sandwich bag. Slice it up one side and put it over your lock like a cows knee. Enough of the zipper part will be hanging below your gun to zip it together. I just rip it off if I get a shot. Carry a few extras in your pocket.

Bill
 
Bryan said:
I was hoping to dodge this bullet, but I don't think I'll be that lucky. Tomorrow is first day of Flintlock here in PA and I'm in the north east where we'll have some wind and snowfall tomorrow.

This will be my first time hunting flintlock and I wasn't prepared to have to protect the lock from moisture.

What can I use around the house to make something tonight?? I don't have any leather so, gotta use old every day household items.

Any help is appreciated. Good luck tomorrow to my fellow PA flintlock brethren! Try to save me some deer tomorrow if you're hunting in Luzurne county. :grin:

Full length gun cover. Effective and HC as well.

Dan
 
“”¦I'm in the north east where we'll have some wind and snowfall tomorrow.”

How much wind? I would rather hunt in the snow than in windy conditions. I haven’t noticed the snow as much of a problem but than again I’ve only hunted with a flintlock in the snow twice but I have shot it (practicing) in the snow quite a bit. I put a broken off round toothpick in the touchhole. I don’t prime (always 4f) until the last minute and I dump it often.
 
It was a driving snow here on opening day and I did the usual "lock under the arm, muzzle down" technique- it was about 20 degrees and wind 5-15mph. I replaced my priming powder about 8 times because it was getting damp. At the end of the day, I fired ol' Bess at a stump and she went off just fine.
 
I just use a piece of flannel shirt and tie it loosely around the lock and frizzen. It draws the moisture away from the charge. I have been doing this for 12 yrs now and its never failed me.
 
You could do what I did 27 years ago. I used to live in southern Maryland and used to hunt with a flintlock in the snow. So, 27 years ago I moved to Florida..., no snow. :grin: :grin:
 
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