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Hi all,
my hunting buddy and I decided to use M/L rifles only this season and I thought I would report the findings.
Nov 5th we both fired a couple caps on our M/L's, then ran dry patchs down the bore on both, removing all the excess oil left from cleaning. Then a quantity of FFFg went down the bore, and using cloth patches we had rubbed crisco into (melting the crisco and pouring it over the patches is SO messy) we both seated a round ball, capped the rifles and went hunting.
The first couple days I pulled the cap when I brought the musket into the house or took it home. Then I remembered an acticle I had read and found a pencil eraser and placed it between the cap and hammer. Bob continued to remove the cap when not hunting.
We hunted every weekend, the guns stayed loaded, in the dry, until Nov. 26, when I had a shot at a nice doe. I raised the rifle, cocked the hammer, and BOOM!!! No hang-fire, no nothing, (also no deer, but thats another story).
Bobs rifle stayed loaded until Dec. 11 when he was sitting in MY STAND and shot a nice 8 point buck at about 25 yards. He cocked the Hawken and BOOM!!! No issues at all. (He owes me half the meat for using my stand!!!)
So, my musket was loaded for a day shy of three weeks, Bobs was loaded for five weeks. The weather was dry, almost no frost or dew, no rain. We took precautions by wiping the bore well to remove oil and using patches not overly soaked with lube.
Am I suggesting my way was right? Not at all, just mentioning the little experiment we conducted on behalf of muzzleloaders everywhere. (ok maybe we just too lazy to clean after every hunt).
anyway, there's our results...let the games begin!
Eterry
my hunting buddy and I decided to use M/L rifles only this season and I thought I would report the findings.
Nov 5th we both fired a couple caps on our M/L's, then ran dry patchs down the bore on both, removing all the excess oil left from cleaning. Then a quantity of FFFg went down the bore, and using cloth patches we had rubbed crisco into (melting the crisco and pouring it over the patches is SO messy) we both seated a round ball, capped the rifles and went hunting.
The first couple days I pulled the cap when I brought the musket into the house or took it home. Then I remembered an acticle I had read and found a pencil eraser and placed it between the cap and hammer. Bob continued to remove the cap when not hunting.
We hunted every weekend, the guns stayed loaded, in the dry, until Nov. 26, when I had a shot at a nice doe. I raised the rifle, cocked the hammer, and BOOM!!! No hang-fire, no nothing, (also no deer, but thats another story).
Bobs rifle stayed loaded until Dec. 11 when he was sitting in MY STAND and shot a nice 8 point buck at about 25 yards. He cocked the Hawken and BOOM!!! No issues at all. (He owes me half the meat for using my stand!!!)
So, my musket was loaded for a day shy of three weeks, Bobs was loaded for five weeks. The weather was dry, almost no frost or dew, no rain. We took precautions by wiping the bore well to remove oil and using patches not overly soaked with lube.
Am I suggesting my way was right? Not at all, just mentioning the little experiment we conducted on behalf of muzzleloaders everywhere. (ok maybe we just too lazy to clean after every hunt).
anyway, there's our results...let the games begin!
Eterry