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AH but after the requirements are met to contain your explosion by your face..., additional cost is moot. For example 12L14 steel is used in America to make black powder gun barrels. Ask the guys who make gun barrels for modern cartridge guns, and they will tell you (as they told me) that 12L14 is NOT gun barrel steel, and is highly risky to use as such a barrel. In fact, NONE of the muzzleloader barrel steels they told me, are safe for gun barrels even if you only use them for black powder. They are experts. YET folks keep buying the black powder only muzzleloader and shooting them without blowing up. You have YET to show that cost is directly proportional to safety. I don't see you upset over the even less expensive Traditions kits out there...., Traditions doesn't make the barrels, btw, for those...,
AH the man-of-faith. The fact is you are taking those maker's "word". OK I get that. Perhaps you've never heard of the Sharon Rifle Barrel company? OR of CVA and the
Apollo rifles? Sharon was sued out of business, I'm told. Probably wrongfully, but allegedly a barrel burst. CVA had a recall of the
Apollo rifle because its barrels kept blowing up, AND they had actually been to an approved proofing house and proofed. They then switched proofing houses....,
NO Actually if you are standing next to me..., there's no guarantee that that it won't be your skull that's injured, if a barrel was to "blow" BUT,
you assume too much, (IMO) and here's why...,
First, it' is documented that more non-Indian muzzleloaders have exploded, than have India parts flintlock muskets. That's a fact. You can go on YouTube and find more videos of muzzleloaders exploding, that aren't "Indian". And there are lots of others that have been reported that aren't on YouTube.
Second, those rifles that have exploded that aren't made from the Indian parts..., Exploded..., which showed that they had been loaded with smokeless powder. Period. So HOW do you expect to ensure that some clown doesn't use smokeless powder, and blows himself up and bystanders too, including maybe you?
You Can't
Third, lots of people say that Pedersoli proof tests all their barrels, and they do. We have members of this forum that have bought muskets made with India made barrels, and these purchasers live where they must proof their muskets to legally own them. They have reported that their muskets passed the proofing house test(s) and got proofing marks. Now that doesn't mean that mine, from the same source, is just as safe as theirs..., but so far as we know, nobody has submitted muskets from the same sources as those that have failed.
Fourth, so continuing about proofing from above..., ALL that proofing does is tell you the barrel was safe, according to that particular proofing house standard, when the barrel l
eft the facility. For example, the Italian proofing house I researched and found it tests at 140% of the max load of powder plus one projectile, while the British and German proofing houses test at 260% and double projectiles..., the German house also has a set size for the touch hole and if the hole is not exactly that size the barrel fails before testing..., now the Spanish houses test at 200% but batch test, so they take say ten barrels from one maker, and choose two, and when those two pass, they stamp the other 8 as well..., which may explain the CVA
Apollo.... BUT..., after that quality musket has left the factory, how do you ensure that the owner keeps the barrel in safe, firing condition year after year after year, and perhaps owner after owner after owner?
You Can't.
Fifth, just because the price is higher is NO assurance of anything other than what you payed.
I bought a barrel from an American company, and it came from the seller with the breech plug installed. I could get information on the steel if I wished, and the company was reputable. It met ALL of
your criteria, but..., when I took a look at the breech, I found that the beech plug was improperly fit, There was a gap between the breech face, and the barrel walls as the breech was just a tad too short. No worries it was replaced. What would've happened had I installed it on a rifle? Likely nothing, but it would've left an area thinner, and prone to corrosion.
See I own and live fire no less than four, India parts muskets. Nothing bad yet.
OH and I own a rather expensive Pedersoli Bess, that has had a lot of expensive, cosmetic surgery, to more resemble an older version Bess musket. It's no Dave Person special, but the changes on it do add up. It's probably at least worth $1000 because of the changes made..., I don't reenact with it. WHY should I be expected to run the risk of banging up such a nice piece by trundling it through the woods, and reducing its value, simply to appease folks who think cost = safety?
You can continue to rest easy on the fallacies that you cited. It's a false sense of security in my opinion. All you can do is rely on the vendor, your own inspection or whomever you contract to do the inspection, and the product track record. Regardless of who puts their name on it and the country where it was made.
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