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This I am sure has been covered endlessly here, but here we go. As background, I have been shooting antique Damascus/twist barreled side by side cartridge shotguns for probably 20 years. (I will get to the muzzleloaders directly, so don't report me). This was an outgrowth of my cowboy action shooting and love of original guns, where possible, for that purpose. Being a stickler for style and period, I gravitated toward guns patented in 1870s. The 1878 Remington Whitmore was one. I could get a beater relatively cheap, cut down, tighten up and refinish. Damascus barrels often with moderate pitting. I kept having people tell me I was holding a bomb and that it was a known fact (which usually means it isn't) that they are unsafe. Shooting black powder, even stout loads, never loosened any of the 10 and 12 gauge guns I shot, and thet certainly never blew apart, even badly pitted ones. Just kept them clean and barrels still ring like bells.
So now I am regularly encountering fine to utilitarian muzzleloading shotguns. Even the ones with moderate bore pitting pass the visual and ring tests. I admit to not shooting most of them, but buy and sell them.
I am sure some of you are familiar with a study/test done many years ago in which the authors tried to get Damascus barreled guns to fail. The upshot, IIRC, was that even badly pitted rattletrap hardware store guns held up under punishment and barring a serious obstruction only failed if heavy smokeless shells/powder loads were introduced.
So after all of that, I wonder how many members of this group shoot antique Damascus barreled shotguns and what are your thoughts for those squeamish about doing so? Probably a can of worms, but what the heck. Pic of my 11 gauge English fowler for reference.
So now I am regularly encountering fine to utilitarian muzzleloading shotguns. Even the ones with moderate bore pitting pass the visual and ring tests. I admit to not shooting most of them, but buy and sell them.
I am sure some of you are familiar with a study/test done many years ago in which the authors tried to get Damascus barreled guns to fail. The upshot, IIRC, was that even badly pitted rattletrap hardware store guns held up under punishment and barring a serious obstruction only failed if heavy smokeless shells/powder loads were introduced.
So after all of that, I wonder how many members of this group shoot antique Damascus barreled shotguns and what are your thoughts for those squeamish about doing so? Probably a can of worms, but what the heck. Pic of my 11 gauge English fowler for reference.