Snakebite
45 Cal.
In my .54 Hawken, 110 or 120grs of 2F for long range (100yds+) or hunting. 60 to 75grs up to 75 yards. It's what works for me.
One of the reasons I’m reading as much as I can on this form is for the education. The Bolivians have a saying where I grew up “Cada loco con su tema” Which translates into “ every crazy person with their own idea” . I have never been a big proponent of bigger is better when it comes to gun calibers. I have family that hunt elk with 7MM mag and 338 Win Mag that look down on anything smaller. I used 30-06 with my 30-30 as back up.Hey Loja man. Try real black powder. Go with 70grs of 2F in your Longrifle. Less kick. also
get a shooting vest or jacket with padding. The small increase triple 7 gives is not important.
Ya if you were shooting across a canyon at 250 yds maybe. But also maybe not. Real Black
powder is a very powerful propellant still used in modern warfare. If you stay with Triple 7
go down to 60 grains. 80 grains is not needed. Put up some 3/4" thick plywood targets.
Now try your loads. Very eye opening- The power of 70 grs Black and 60 grs T-7.! Too much
recoil leads to being gun-shy and affects aiming the rifle/gun. Remember powder charts
from manufacturers want to keep the consumption high as they can safely recommend.
You can even go lower than I am recommending. A 45-50 cal Hawken type rifle with 70 grains of
real Black Powder and a round ball will take deer across America. Sometimes with the
experience in mind, Less is More.
Funny. I used a Grey Hawk for my first two ML deer. It shoots very well with conicals, but 54 conicals are heavy and recoil is a bit much for me with that light a rifle. So I spent a bunch of time working up a PRB load with Black MZ. After a whole bunch of load work up, I finally got very good accuracy with an over powder wad and a whopping 110 grains of powder. Recoil wasn't as punishing as the conicals (which were almost an ounce of lead), but it was definitely noticeable. I should go back and try again with a different powder to see if I can get better results without such a big charge, but the rifle became my backup/loaner for hunting and I moved on to other things for target work.
That much powder sure does fling the ball, though. The second deer was a Texas heart shot at 60 or so yards. Broke the big thigh bone and went all the way through the hundred pound button buck, lodging in the front shoulder.
One of the reasons I’m reading as much as I can on this form is for the education. The Bolivians have a saying where I grew up “Cada loco con su tema” Which translates into “ every crazy person with their own idea” . I have never been a big proponent of bigger is better when it comes to gun calibers. I have family that hunt elk with 7MM mag and 338 Win Mag that look down on anything smaller. I used 30-06 with my 30-30 as back up.
As I got in the black powder so often I was hearing 80 to 110 grains of powder for a hunting load. The more I have read it seems the most common number I see is 70 grains. Obviously different gun shoot better with different loads. If your gun shoots great with 90 grains perfect but mine doesn’t. So I’m trying to work up a solid load that will bring down deer. Right now I am shooting a good pattern with 60 grains of Tripple7 FFFG.
I do have real black in FFFG on had. So I may give that a whirl and see how it dose.
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