I've only been doing this since the 60's but I've never broken one of my hickory ramrods yet. I own a brass sectional rod that a friend gifted me with and a couple of steel shop rods (ditto) but I generally use the one in the barrel pipes or a hickory "bench" rod that's 7/16" diameter with a brass cap and jags. Oh ... wait a minute ... I do have a one piece steel rod with an antler handle that a buddy thought we should have "in case" to use with my son's little .32 caliber Boy's Rifle because the wooden rod that came with the rifle was only about 5/16". It's out in the shop someplace and the steel shop rods are hanging on my tool rack out there too (I think ... ?). Got two or three pistol loading rods with ball knobs for handles but they're hickory too. One pistol I carried for a long time was built on the Harper's Ferry design but with a lanyard ring on the butt cap to use with a lanyard while horseback. The barrel markings said it was a .58 caliber, so I was loading a .575" RB with a thin patch and it loaded dang hard! Finally one rendezvous I was shooting in a match against ol' Two Bears and it went into extra innings. Didn't have a bench or a loading stand, just me and the pouch and horn with my loading rod stuck in my belt, kneeling on the ground in the woods where the match was held with the gun propped between my knees to load. After the first two shots, that pistola got downright difficult to load and I had to resort to pounding the loading rod ball-handle with a chunk of stove wood. When I got back to the shop, I disassembled that pistol and pulled the breech plug, then slugged the barrel. Turned out it was actually a .56 caliber --- which explains why it loaded hard with a patched .575 round ball!
Didn't break my hickory pistol rod, but I surely did mark up that ball handle with some dents and dings! I found out later that Bears was using a Bondini match pistol with a set trigger and all that foofaraw so I traded up to a Bondini .54 of my own but never could get that varmint into another shooting match!
Didn't break my hickory pistol rod, but I surely did mark up that ball handle with some dents and dings! I found out later that Bears was using a Bondini match pistol with a set trigger and all that foofaraw so I traded up to a Bondini .54 of my own but never could get that varmint into another shooting match!