I’m getting a new Traditions Crockett tomorrow, is there anything special I should do to start shooting it? (Special way of cleaning, etc)
I did this on mine. The bore is VERY tight -- may be tighter than "normal" .32 cal. bores. I had fairly constant problems with fouling (using real black powder: Schuetzen 3F, .310 ball, and .015 patch) until I stumbled in a pretty random way on my lube of Simple Green and olive oil. Now, it basically doesn't foul. I also lapped the bore, but it may not need this.I know some people have reduced the jag diameter because the cleaning patches get caught.
This seems to be the most frequently cited load. Seems to work well for me at 25 yds. and 50 yds. I have not yet managed to spend the time on a 100 yd. range, but did take a few shots on one a while ago (from a bench/sand bag) and was amazed at how well the gun did, The .310 ball and 0.15 patch in my gun is not a "tight" load. I would call it "snug", but easy to seat. No exertion, forcing, pounding, etc. I see no reason to use a tighter one, at least at the moment.My best load has been 20 grains of 3F, a .310 ball and a .015 patch
I put a couple of short pads of epoxy under the barrel and one under the tang -- just because I didn't quite like how it looked, and because the tang wasn't bottoming out when the barrel was well fit in the channel (with the epoxy pads). I don't like seeing stuff bend or shift when I'm tightening stock screws on a barrel or action.I guess I should glass bed the barrel but I did a temporary fix by shimming under the tang and inletting the spring a little deeper.
How long ago did you get that rifle? I got mine from Midway at the end of Sept. in 2021. I wonder if it may have suffered from being made during the Covid scourge (which hit parts of Europe particularly hard).My Crockett came nicely assembled but with not necessarily primo fitting. Still there was nothing remotely sloppy about it.
Good to have that kind of service. I put blue locktite on all those thimble screws and on the screws holding the rail to the barrel. They're all pretty short, and I had some loosen up after I'd tightened them and without Loctite.Back at the motel the only thing I can find wrong is the end ramrod thimble is a little loose.
Oh, sorry I forgot to mention that. It's a bit of a pain. It's actually too tight only on one side, but that's enough. I just filed down two opposing sides of my Traditions (I think) wrench. The alternative would be to remove a little of the metal where the nipple fits in itself. But I preferred to leave that as it was since it's not overly thick. Here, again, is another odd design/fabrication flaw. It doesn't have to be that way. Just from an engineering and product development perspective, it's just not possible to understand how something like that got into production.I did not know that a regular nipple wrench was too big for the Crockett. The owner at Kenockee, modified a wrench to fit the Crockett for me. Great service and a fountain of information about black powder.
Youtube has a lot of videos on thisI’m getting a new Traditions Crockett tomorrow, is there anything special I should do to start shooting it? (Special way of cleaning, etc)
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