40 years ago I was a teenager with a hankering for muzzleloading rifles, rifles I would read about in the books and magazines of the day but sure couldn't afford on my grass cutting/hay baling/snow shoveling budget. Couple of weeks ago on one of the auction sites I came across this rifle, one of those I wanted way back when, and bought it, as much for the memories, not that I don't need a .58 that can fire "a charge of 180 grains of FFFg with the 610 grain Minie bullet". I'm thinking 100 grains of FFg and a PRB will do fine for me out of the 26" barrel with a 1-60 twist, at least for any Ohio whitetails I get in my sights.
Val Forgett, the founder/President of Navy Arms, took one of these rifles hunting to Africa, as detailed in an article in the 1975 Lyman Black Powder Handbook, a nice vintage reference book well worth the price asked on various online sites. I'll try the sights currently on it, a folding express rear and very narrow nickel blade front, but expect those will get changed out, and the trigger pull needs lightening. As soon as I can round up some .570 balls I'll get it to the range, I thought I had some but all I can find are .562, might work, but I think .570 would be better.
Now if I can just find that GRRW Bridger at a reasonable price, and maybe a GRRW Leman in .58, and a Ithaca/Navy Hawken, and one of Curly's tradeguns, and probably a dozen more that will bring back some fond memories.
Val Forgett, the founder/President of Navy Arms, took one of these rifles hunting to Africa, as detailed in an article in the 1975 Lyman Black Powder Handbook, a nice vintage reference book well worth the price asked on various online sites. I'll try the sights currently on it, a folding express rear and very narrow nickel blade front, but expect those will get changed out, and the trigger pull needs lightening. As soon as I can round up some .570 balls I'll get it to the range, I thought I had some but all I can find are .562, might work, but I think .570 would be better.
Now if I can just find that GRRW Bridger at a reasonable price, and maybe a GRRW Leman in .58, and a Ithaca/Navy Hawken, and one of Curly's tradeguns, and probably a dozen more that will bring back some fond memories.