Little Wattsy
69 Cal.
- Joined
- Jan 7, 2008
- Messages
- 3,631
- Reaction score
- 9
You are going to have a ball... All puns intended :grin: Lots to lean and more to tinker with... Welcome aboard!
Lonegun1894 said:First of, congrats on choosing a fine caliber and welcome to the addiction. I have one suggestion that no one has mentioned yet. If possible, shoulder your choices before buying. While I have 3 GPRs and prefer the feel of them and the way they shoot over my CVA St. Louis Hawken and my TC Hawken, the GPR does feel different. To me, the main difference isn't in the lenght of the barrel, but rather the extra drop in the stock that the GPR has when compared to the CVA or TC, which also have very similar if not identical drop to the Trade rifle. Sorry to throw one more variable into the equation for you, but just wanted to make sure you knew before spending your hard earned cash. And while I prefer the GPR with its 1:60 ROT, my TC and CVA "hawkens" shoot the same size groups and both of them have the 1:48" ROT, so dont let the twist scare you away from the Trade Rifle or Dixie Hawken should they fit you better than the GPR. But I chose the GPR, several times already. They're a great production rifle.
splinter84 said:I was planning to put an order in for a GPR tomorrow but my wife mentioned making another trip to Cabelas to check out a few rifles there. I am going to try and find a rifle similar
to the GPR to get a feel of the butt stock. Maybe their Kentucky rifle would be a close comparison. It won't be like holding an actual GPR but close.
I found a picture on google images of a Trade and GPR sitting next to each other and I was pleasantly surprised that the GPR wasn't that much longer than the Trade rifle.
Been reading that the GPR trigger assembly needs a little work out of the box. Is this a big issue or more of a personal preference and taste?
crockett said:Splinter84: maybe a few other odds and ends: I think you ought to start with the .530 ball and then worry about a .535 (harder to load) or a special .528 ("thumb" load). The choice of real black powder 2f is good, the .018 patch is good. You really don't need a capper or you can make one out of scrap leather- punch holes along one side of the leather and split to the edge and stick in the caps. One thing you ought to buy is a breech plug scrapper to scrape residue from the face of the breech plug. Most breech plugs are flat however a couple are concave so you need a scrapper to match the type breech plug you have. I would also get a powder horn or flask and a nipple wrench to remove the nipple for cleaning. I use q-tips to clean out the drum area after the nipple is removed. A ball puller is good but you might also want to consider a co2 powered ball remover.
BrownBear said:splinter84 said:I was planning to put an order in for a GPR tomorrow but my wife mentioned making another trip to Cabelas to check out a few rifles there. I am going to try and find a rifle similar
to the GPR to get a feel of the butt stock. Maybe their Kentucky rifle would be a close comparison. It won't be like holding an actual GPR but close.
I found a picture on google images of a Trade and GPR sitting next to each other and I was pleasantly surprised that the GPR wasn't that much longer than the Trade rifle.
Been reading that the GPR trigger assembly needs a little work out of the box. Is this a big issue or more of a personal preference and taste?
You'll probably find the Cabellas Hawken rather than the Kentucky more like the feel of a GPR, and especially the Lyman Trade Rifle. Good to feel and compare though, because each of us is built a little different and has a little different tastes.
As for the Lyman triggers and fiddling, it all depends on your expectations in a trigger. I have pretty high expectations and change out the triggers in all my GPRs. Best answer once again, is to try it first before fiddling. If you like it, carry on. If you don't, fiddle.
splinter84 said:If I were to go with a Lyman, I don't think the breech plug is flat so probably a concave scraper?
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