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Pedersoli Jaeger

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vulture

40 Cal.
Joined
Jul 7, 2008
Messages
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Ok, so I posted about this rifle that I had been looking at and wanted to purchase for some time, and I finally got one, I'll have to see if I can get my camera working and take some pics of it and some of my other builds, this was not a build, it was a Pedersoli American Jaeger flintlock. It is not a true Jaeger I know but as I posted before it was just what I was looking for, right caliber, .54, flintlock, and short barrel. Once I got it I posted about the problem I was having with the lock not producing much spark, got that worked out and had a chance to take it out shooting a week ago, not such a good experience. The ignition time is a bit slow in my opinion, but I can work on that, the main problems are it shoots way low, and the bore is a real odd size. I knew my .530's and .535's wouldn't fit, the .535,s I could almost shoot without any patching at all, so I got some .526 cast ball from TOTW, they worked ok, but now the patching I have used for years with all my other .54's is too thick,it is .015 - .020 think cotton pillow ticking, not sure exactly, but it is thick. I have one .54 that I built using a Green River Rifle Works barrel and it is on the small size, .530's will work, but it really likes the .527,s I used to be able to purchase. This is the only real complaint that I have against this nice little rifle is that Pedersoli didn't make it a true .54, but is more like a .53, which in this day and age makes it difficult to find round ball for it. I am going to try some Lee R.E.A.L. slugs in it, it appears to have shallow rifling from what I can tell, but not sure if they will actually go down this bore. Not sure if I want to start filing on the front sight to bring it down, or look for a replacement rear sight that is taller, guess I could just make me a rear sight, wouldn't be as pretty as this one, but it would be taller and bring my point of impact up.
 
Question did you get the Hunter, or the Target version of the rifle? Hunter has a 1:23 twist which Pedersoli recommends only conicals with while the Target has a much more gradual 1:65
 
I purchased a Pedersoli Jaeger a short time ago on the Classified Section of this website from a man in Oregon. It shoots extremely well with a .530 (actual .532) ball cast from Lee mold, 70 grains of fffg, and a .014 cotton pillow ticking patch. I can get consistent 2" or less groups at 50 yards. I opened the pan wider, and replaced the front sight with a brass blade. Ignition is fast and reliable. I am not sure but I believe it is the Hunter model.

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From the looks of it actually you have the more expensive Target rifle (the Hunter models have iron furniture and no checkering on the waist of the stock).
 
Hornady makes .520 swaged balls. Buy a box and see if you like them. If so, get a mold of that size. I don't know who makes one that size since it is not common, but I would check out Lee first. If it is not a catalog item call them. They may have a few around the warehouse as leftovers from a special run.
 
I have the faster twist Jaeger and it shoots .530 round ball just fine. I found that the DGW vent liner has way too small of a hole and drilled that out to 5/64 (I believe). I put just enough powder to cover the bottom of the pan, drilled out vent hole, and ignition is great.
 
I just got a hunter model with iron furniture too in the beginning of the year used. It fires .53 round balls with a 0.10 pre-greased patches just fine and is accurate at the 50 yard targets I've been shooting at. Its my favorite gun.
 
I have been taking the hunter fast-twist flint version of the Pedersoli Jaeger into the field for the past several years. I bought it here. It's reliable with 90 grains of FFFG and a .53 ball with a .01 Ox lubed patch. It shoots great at 50 yards and I can carry it for the long hunts. Also it fits in a hard-sided gun case for taking on flights as stowed baggage. No pig with it yet, but works. I filed the front sight down to raise the point of impact. Of all the flintlock rifles I've fired, it's my #1 choice.
 
Try to work on one thing at a time. When I got mine, I had to work the springs a little because the cockpiece fall was very heavy and the sparks were not going into the pan. I filed the outside edges of both main and frizzen springs and got it working well and fast. I flipped it on Gunbroker because I needed gelt for a kit so I could build, but first I ran a .53 ball with a piece of old denim and it fit nice and tight.

I guess the production guns have tolerances which don't make it to the buyer and barrels are probably shipped in lots.

NO, it ain't a Jaeger, but the lines on it are pleasing. I refinished it with some incise, a better stain and some Permalyn and it looked nice.

I think this is a good gun and would have kept it were I not salivating for the kit experience.
 
Vulture,

Deer Creek Products, Waldron, Indiana has .520 balls for .53 cal. guns. Phone number is 1-765-525-6181. Sometimes they're a little slow answering but they're good people.

sharpshooter 1949
 
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