Last month I took my DP Indian Trade Musk to the range for its first outing; it performed admirably, but that is not the reason for this post, but this is what I witnessed during the comp:
One of the competitors (I'm not saying it wasn't me) had a misfire, he prudently waited for 30+ seconds with the gunne pointing safely down range; then checked the priming powder, and again wiped the frizzen & flint, then proceeded to have another go; nothing happened again. He again waited for 30+ seconds then proceeded to blow the priming powder from the pan, & wiped the pan clean & the frizzen. He left the frizzen open & proceeded to knap the flint as he has always done in this situation. When finished knapping he did something, that he was aware at the time he had never done before, and that was to check to see if the freshly knapped flint would spark, so he closed the frizzen, full cock on the other thing, securely gripped the gonne as it rested on the bench rest (the gunne was now pointing approximately at the 50yd targets) then proceeded to pull the trigger. I stress that he was NOT caught by suprise, but the gonne did go BANG without any priming powder in the pan! Throughout the above procedure, the gunne was appropriately pointed down range. Now I'm not saying that this was me, but has anyone had similar experience?
Jim.
:thumbsup:
One of the competitors (I'm not saying it wasn't me) had a misfire, he prudently waited for 30+ seconds with the gunne pointing safely down range; then checked the priming powder, and again wiped the frizzen & flint, then proceeded to have another go; nothing happened again. He again waited for 30+ seconds then proceeded to blow the priming powder from the pan, & wiped the pan clean & the frizzen. He left the frizzen open & proceeded to knap the flint as he has always done in this situation. When finished knapping he did something, that he was aware at the time he had never done before, and that was to check to see if the freshly knapped flint would spark, so he closed the frizzen, full cock on the other thing, securely gripped the gonne as it rested on the bench rest (the gunne was now pointing approximately at the 50yd targets) then proceeded to pull the trigger. I stress that he was NOT caught by suprise, but the gonne did go BANG without any priming powder in the pan! Throughout the above procedure, the gunne was appropriately pointed down range. Now I'm not saying that this was me, but has anyone had similar experience?
Jim.
:thumbsup: