It was in conjunction with the unmentionable muzzleloader the OP was talking about.WARNING! I noted above a member said smokless powder. NEVER PUT SMOKLESS IN ANY MUZZLELOADER. DEATH/DESTRUCTION/PAIN etc. Only one single muzzleloader I can thin of can use it and its not a CVA. NO SMOKELESS POWDER
Learn something new every day, never having used them I always was under the impression the synthetics were smokeless. My bad, sorry.Which is a CVA wolf or whatever and is very likely gonna blow up with smokeless powder. We should NEVER mention smokeless here. There is only one (Savage) that can even use it and its an unmentionable.
Remember this lady is a newbie buying for a newbie. Gotta be real careful with that advise on powder. SYNTHETIC black powder is what she will be able to find (Triple 7, Pyrodex, etc etc.).
I'm really making a wild guess here, but I think @kje54 really meant to describe modern substitute powders for black powder applications such as Pyrodex or Triple Seven. Blackhorn 209 is another black powder substitute that has a very high ignition point that requires the 209 shotgun primer and a special nipple to fire it.You should be fine. As for powder, depends on what you're going to use, modern smokeless (most likely with that firearm) or black powder. All of them are available online though you have to pay a hazmat fee + shipping. Graf & Sons, as well as many others has all of that.
That said why a modern muzzleloader vs a traditional?
Yes I did, my mistake.I'm really making a wild guess here, but I think @kje54 really meant to describe modern substitute powders for black powder applications such as Pyrodex or Triple Seven. Blackhorn 209 is another black powder substitute that has a very high ignition point that requires the 209 shotgun primer and a special nipple to fire it.
If you read through you'll see many responded to correct my mistake, NEVER use smokeless powder in a muzzleloader, use black powder or black powder synthetics ONLY.You should be fine. As for powder, depends on what you're going to use, modern smokeless (most likely with that firearm) or black powder. All of them are available online though you have to pay a hazmat fee + shipping. Graf & Sons, as well as many others has all of that.
That said why a modern muzzleloader vs a traditional?
Your owners manual will answer a lot of questions for you. Look up YouTube videos, they will be a great asset and learning tool. Here are a few websites for you to browse.
Track of the Wolf - Muzzle Loading & Black Powder Guns Kits, Parts, Accoutrements, Rendezvous Gear & Primitive Americana
Black Powder Guns & Firearms - Black Powder Supplies | Cabela's
Dixie Gun Works muzzleloading, blackpowder and rare antique gun supplies.
Good luck
Find a local muzzleloading club; they are out there. Talk to the folks at a meeting or on the range to get an idea, and some hands-on instruction. If you wish to truly enjoy the sport, you will need others to play with.
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