jbwilliams3
45 Cal.
- Joined
- Dec 23, 2006
- Messages
- 689
- Reaction score
- 159
hunter12 said:How dependable is the lock on the blue ridge.I'v heard you have to drill out the touch hole a bit.Only flint lock i'v had experiance with was the Cabin creek york town i had. It worked all the time but it had a siler lock. But that's the past.
Hunter,
The Pedersoli Frontier (marketed by calelas as the Blue Ridge) has a pretty good lock for a factory rifle. It’s a big lock with strong springs, stronger than I care for so it makes for a bit of a flint crusher if you don’t have the flint lined up well enough or have a misshapen flint, etc. At least it doesn’t have any trouble sparking. The real quirk with those guns is the patent breach, the small chamber at the breach end which allows powder down near the touch hole, but not the ball. I had one of these guns in .45 and that chamber was a bit annoying, particularly because I didn’t know it was there until it caused misfires from being clogged (I couldn’t figure out why cleaning patches kept coming back with fowling on the very tip). Anyhow, I hear it’s not as much of an issue with the larger calibers and it’s not an “issue”, per se, if you clean the chamber with a small caliber brush. It’s just annoying.
I’m sorry to hear you know longer have that Cabin Creek rifle. I’m afraid any factory gun will be a big step down as far as aesthetics are concerned. That said, if all one cares about is the particular ignition system and not the architecture, etc. then you can hunt and hit paper just as well most of the time with a well-tuned factory gun. The Pedersoli was a good first flintlock for me, quirks aside. It was accurate. One additional comment on them from a practical standpoint (I won’t comment on their appearance of balance unless you’re interested): the rifling is sharp from the factory and can make loading the first couple hundred balls difficult as well as possibly tearing patches. Some oiled scotchbrite can help with that, I think. Also, the buckhorn rear sight takes some getting used to.
James