KyHeadhunter
32 Cal.
- Joined
- Nov 11, 2003
- Messages
- 26
- Reaction score
- 0
I'm new to muzzleloaders... so new I've not yet fired a shot through a black powder rifle.
I recently aquired a side hammer .50 caliber rifle and have some questions about it.
The stock is real walnut. Trigger guard is brass, and other than small brass plates around the forearm pin, it's the only "hardware" on the stock. The only nomenclature is on the barrel: "Spain", "Springfield Hawken", "Black Powder Only", a small box with "1-66" "50 cal", and a six-digit serial number. 1-66" I know is the rifling, but I have no idea who actually made the gun. It's equipped with a fixed blade from sight, and a rear sight that's adjustable for windage & elevation by means of a screw for each.
The gun fits me very well, and I find it easy to aquire the sights & aim. Outside it's in very good shape, but (isn't there always a "but"), after much scrubbing to remove crud & rust, the barrel is pitted badly. I'd like to know exactly what make/model weapon it is, because I might be interested in getting a replacement barrel. Everything else about the gun screams that I'd love it.
Another question... is a pitted barrel in any way a safety concern? There are no cracks or bulges, and the rifling is visible despite the pitting. I understand accuracy may be poor, but since there is a blackpowder deer season in mid-December, I thought I would try it just to see how bad it is. But only if there's no safety concern. If it's capable of reliably grouping within a whitetails vitals out to 50 yards or so, I'd consider hunting with it as-is until I could get a new barrel.
I recently aquired a side hammer .50 caliber rifle and have some questions about it.
The stock is real walnut. Trigger guard is brass, and other than small brass plates around the forearm pin, it's the only "hardware" on the stock. The only nomenclature is on the barrel: "Spain", "Springfield Hawken", "Black Powder Only", a small box with "1-66" "50 cal", and a six-digit serial number. 1-66" I know is the rifling, but I have no idea who actually made the gun. It's equipped with a fixed blade from sight, and a rear sight that's adjustable for windage & elevation by means of a screw for each.
The gun fits me very well, and I find it easy to aquire the sights & aim. Outside it's in very good shape, but (isn't there always a "but"), after much scrubbing to remove crud & rust, the barrel is pitted badly. I'd like to know exactly what make/model weapon it is, because I might be interested in getting a replacement barrel. Everything else about the gun screams that I'd love it.
Another question... is a pitted barrel in any way a safety concern? There are no cracks or bulges, and the rifling is visible despite the pitting. I understand accuracy may be poor, but since there is a blackpowder deer season in mid-December, I thought I would try it just to see how bad it is. But only if there's no safety concern. If it's capable of reliably grouping within a whitetails vitals out to 50 yards or so, I'd consider hunting with it as-is until I could get a new barrel.