I recently got a bug in my ear to try a flintlock. I've been shooting a percussion Hawken for a few years and it is definitely the most fun of my rifles to shoot.
Since I already have a rifle that I use for medium game, I thought a smoothbore flintlock might be a good addition to the quiver since it would give me the option of hunting with shot for things like turkey, upland game and small game as well as big game at close ranges. Here in CA, we are limited to lead-free shot so I'd be hoping to use steel BBs or some other non-toxic alternative while hunting birds & small game.
I don't really care all that much about authenticity or flash. My percussion rifle is a simple Traditions Woodsman that shoots well enough for me. It's rough but it goes *BOOM* reliably and hits where I'm aiming, so long as I do my part. I know people love their custom guns. But I've been well-served by buying well-made budget equipment in the past and look to continue to do that going forward. I don't ever want to skimp on safety. But I take pride in what I do with my weapons, not what they are.
So my first question is whether a .60-cal (0.58-0.62 somewhere) would be adequate for my purposes. For turkey, I like to get them within 20 yards but it would be nice if the shot was still effective out to about 25 in case I make a distance estimation error. What kind of pattern do these things hold?
My second question is on the best of the budget lines. I was looking at Veteran Arms and a couple others around the $700-800 range. As a hunter ed instructor, I can get a Traditions 70-caliber percussion musket kit for a little less than that (no flintlock version, unfortunately). Are the Traditions components any better than the other budget options out there? Thoughts on a Traditions kit vs budget finished rifle?
Since I already have a rifle that I use for medium game, I thought a smoothbore flintlock might be a good addition to the quiver since it would give me the option of hunting with shot for things like turkey, upland game and small game as well as big game at close ranges. Here in CA, we are limited to lead-free shot so I'd be hoping to use steel BBs or some other non-toxic alternative while hunting birds & small game.
I don't really care all that much about authenticity or flash. My percussion rifle is a simple Traditions Woodsman that shoots well enough for me. It's rough but it goes *BOOM* reliably and hits where I'm aiming, so long as I do my part. I know people love their custom guns. But I've been well-served by buying well-made budget equipment in the past and look to continue to do that going forward. I don't ever want to skimp on safety. But I take pride in what I do with my weapons, not what they are.
So my first question is whether a .60-cal (0.58-0.62 somewhere) would be adequate for my purposes. For turkey, I like to get them within 20 yards but it would be nice if the shot was still effective out to about 25 in case I make a distance estimation error. What kind of pattern do these things hold?
My second question is on the best of the budget lines. I was looking at Veteran Arms and a couple others around the $700-800 range. As a hunter ed instructor, I can get a Traditions 70-caliber percussion musket kit for a little less than that (no flintlock version, unfortunately). Are the Traditions components any better than the other budget options out there? Thoughts on a Traditions kit vs budget finished rifle?