Every time I get another catalog from the places selling modern ammo and such I am amazed at the prices.
After reading thru the latest I got to thinking, "How can a person shooting a modern hunting rifle ever afford to shoot enough to get to know his/her gun and where it's shooting?"
With this question in the back of my mind, I decided to compare a .50 caliber percussion gun loaded with 70 grains of Black powder, a .490 diameter swaged roundball, a commercial pillow ticking patch and a bit of Crisco for lube against three of the more popular deer cartridges listed in the sales catalog I have received.
Knowing that Dixie's prices are usually a bit high I used them as a source of information on prices.
I did not include shipping because I figured most shooters will buy their ammo or ML supplies locally.
For the Modern guns:
.270 = $19.47/20 = $0.97/shot
.30-30 = $15.27/20 = $0.76/shot
.30-06 = $19.87/20 = $0.99/shot
For the muzzleloader:
.490 swaged roundball = $17.75/100 = $0.18/shot
.50 cal pillow ticking patch = $4.75/100 = $0.05/shot
RWS #11 caps = $9.95/100 = $0.10/shot
Crisco patch lube = almost nothing
Black Powder = $20.00/100 = $0.20/shot
Grand TOTAL = $0.53/shot.
Even comparing the muzzleloader with the low cost .30-30 we save 23 cents/shot. Put another way three shots from the muzzleloader costs $1.59 while 2 shots from the .30-30 cost $1.52 so for the difference of a few cents we can get 33 percent more shooting (and a lot more satisfaction). :grin:
Of course we can improvise by casting our balls for about 5 cents each if we use $2.00/pound lead and cutting our patches out of a yard of store bought pillow ticking reduces the cost per patch to almost nothing. Those two things alone will reduce the cost by about 13 cents ending up costing about $0.40 cents per shot.
40 cents per shot for something that will knock down a deer with equal effectiveness out to a range of 100 yards? That's a pretty good deal if you ask me but, the biggest gain is because our guns cost less to shoot we can afford to shoot more.
That allows us to become intimately knowledgeable of where our guns are shooting which makes a good accurate hit almost automatic on the chest cavity of a deer.
Good shooting to you.
After reading thru the latest I got to thinking, "How can a person shooting a modern hunting rifle ever afford to shoot enough to get to know his/her gun and where it's shooting?"
With this question in the back of my mind, I decided to compare a .50 caliber percussion gun loaded with 70 grains of Black powder, a .490 diameter swaged roundball, a commercial pillow ticking patch and a bit of Crisco for lube against three of the more popular deer cartridges listed in the sales catalog I have received.
Knowing that Dixie's prices are usually a bit high I used them as a source of information on prices.
I did not include shipping because I figured most shooters will buy their ammo or ML supplies locally.
For the Modern guns:
.270 = $19.47/20 = $0.97/shot
.30-30 = $15.27/20 = $0.76/shot
.30-06 = $19.87/20 = $0.99/shot
For the muzzleloader:
.490 swaged roundball = $17.75/100 = $0.18/shot
.50 cal pillow ticking patch = $4.75/100 = $0.05/shot
RWS #11 caps = $9.95/100 = $0.10/shot
Crisco patch lube = almost nothing
Black Powder = $20.00/100 = $0.20/shot
Grand TOTAL = $0.53/shot.
Even comparing the muzzleloader with the low cost .30-30 we save 23 cents/shot. Put another way three shots from the muzzleloader costs $1.59 while 2 shots from the .30-30 cost $1.52 so for the difference of a few cents we can get 33 percent more shooting (and a lot more satisfaction). :grin:
Of course we can improvise by casting our balls for about 5 cents each if we use $2.00/pound lead and cutting our patches out of a yard of store bought pillow ticking reduces the cost per patch to almost nothing. Those two things alone will reduce the cost by about 13 cents ending up costing about $0.40 cents per shot.
40 cents per shot for something that will knock down a deer with equal effectiveness out to a range of 100 yards? That's a pretty good deal if you ask me but, the biggest gain is because our guns cost less to shoot we can afford to shoot more.
That allows us to become intimately knowledgeable of where our guns are shooting which makes a good accurate hit almost automatic on the chest cavity of a deer.
Good shooting to you.