Pedersoli Hawken .50 Cal Advice

Muzzleloading Forum

Help Support Muzzleloading Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
Joined
Jan 3, 2022
Messages
52
Reaction score
25
Hi All,

I’m relatively new to traditional muzzleloaders. I want to start hunting with them instead of inlines. A gun shop near me has a Pedersoli Hawken in .50 Cal. I’m not certain on the model, but it appears to have double set triggers. They claim it’s never been fired, and lived its life hanging over a bar. My questions are, would this be a good buy at $450 OTD, and would it make a good target and hunting rifle for Midwest whitetails? I’ll attach a picture and maybe someone will be able to help me with the model. Thanks!
 

Attachments

  • IMG_4906.jpeg
    IMG_4906.jpeg
    50 KB
Also, is there anything specific I should look at extra close (I know the bore and crown), or any other guns my money would be better spent on in that similar price range. Thanks again!
 
One more thing, I think that is good that you want to hunt with a traditional ml. The feeling of accomplishment is wonderful!
Thanks! Yeah, I put down the compound bow and picked up a long bow to hunt with 2 years ago. Could have killed a mess of deer if I had my compound, but they always seem to be just out of range for me with my long bow. It’s like they know and they’re taunting me!
 
The rifle pictured is the same as Cabela sold, it would work fine for your use. Buy a jag that fits the ramrod for cleaning.
 
Were/are the cabelas ones not as nice? Looks like those retail for $580. Would it still be a good buy at $450?
The Cabela's version would be the same. The $580 price at Cabelas now is a great price compared to others I could find at $900 and up! If you have points to help lower that, all the better!

Frankly, for $140, I'd get the new one. But each person has to judge that for themselves. At a minimum, I'd try to negotiate the $450 down to $400. Maybe start with a $350 offer to see where it goes?...what do you have to lose?

I've owned several Pedersoli rifles. All have been great shooters for accuracy. The "lower end" models can have heavy trigger pulls if not using the set trigger. I hate set triggers in cold weather hunting because a gloved finger on a few oz pull can fire before you're ready. So, you might want to try the trigger out to see how that pull feels.
 
Back
Top