Thank you. This was its 2.5th deer. It began hunting last year and was successful right out of the gate. It’s taking me time to figure out distance shots, like 95-110 yards.Congratulations breaking the ice with the new 62.
So does PA not require flintlocks anymore? Or is that an early vs late season thing?
As Dave says above, we have two black powder seasons because it's Pennsylvania and what would hunting here be if not complicated as heck so that we all have plenty to argue about endlessly and forever...?! Flintlocks, percussion, inlines, and now breech-loaded charge guns (bullet goes down the muzzle) are all kosher for the early one-week season. After-Christmas season is flintlock only. I know, it is messy. A hunter here needs a lawyer in his pocket. And every little eensy weensy change comes incrementally and with great foaming of mouth and gnashing of teeth and wailing of voice and beating of breast...because it is PA and we move incrementally slowly here. Like the Ice Ages here were an inspiration to our decision makers. For example, our doe tag process is an UNREAL super complicated process of application with two postal stamp bright pink envelopes that anti hunting postal employees just looooove to throw out. Lots to improve here...and yet...a great cry has gone up about breaking tradition. As if loyalty to a broken paper process is meritorious in a day of near-instantaneous electronic lottery.I have two Plains rifles in .62 and two smoothbores. My favorite guns they just hit hard. And with that big ball and knowing your hold over I generally shoot 60 grains of 3F. Haven’t recovered a ball yet.
So does PA not require flintlocks anymore? Or is that an early vs late season thing?
Thank you for the nice comment, NB. We are bear hunting here in PA right now, and the .62 is next to me. Yes, it is just one shot, but i shoot so well with it that I am confident of killing any bear that provides a broadside within 100 yards.That was a really good hunting story, @pamtnman ! A very good read.
What a shot, too! A deer's neck is a mighty small target, and I'd say you hit it dead center.
It sounds as if the family who received the meat knew what they were getting and appreciated it very much. That was the right thing to do.
I remember reading about that rifle when you were researching it and after it was finished. If I remember correctly, the original was a Folsom trade rifle with a Henry (breechloader) rear sight, originally owned by Baptiste "Little Bat" Garnier. A very interesting historic rifle, owned by a remarkable scout. The rifle is a beauty, in form and function.
If the lock needs attention, I would agree with sending or taking it to Brad Emig, right there in Pennsylvania. He tuned up two flint locks for me, one L&R and one Pedersoli, and the difference in performance after he "doctored" them was like night and day. I called him a couple of days ago about a lock on an original pistol. He spent a little time on the phone explaining what he could do, and how he would approach the job. It was a very educational conversation, for me. He used to only work on flint locks, but will now consider cap locks, which is good. The man knows locks!
This is a good thread.
Best regards,
Notchy Bob
Thank you. Presently I am up north bear hunting and not seeing any deer or bear. I’m thinking this may be the only deer I’ll get a shot at this season. Hope I’m wrong, but there are no acorns anywhereCongratulations!!
Sometimes my nipple gets hammered into a larger diameter and the caps then do not seat properly and tend to cushion the blow of the hammer. I place them in a drill and touch them up with a file to return them to their original diameter.Good question. It’s not the first time the gun has failed to go bang on first pull. I think the lock is in need of some tensioning so the hammer snaps down with more authority.
Congrats! You are going to really enjoy this caliber. My own 62 has very shallow and slow twist, designed for round ball only. But I imagine it’s easy to have a faster rifling cut to handle conicals etc. However, the 335-grain round ball is a heavy enough shove backwards for me, thank you very much. I can only imagine the punishment a 400-550 grain conical would dish out on the buttstock end. This rifle’s accuracy is phenomenal as is its crushing power. It’s everything a hunter needs, because it will cleanly take pretty much any North American big game animal short of a grizz. It’s not a target gun. Let us know how you do.I just got a .62 rifle can't wait to get something with it!
Thank you. This was its 2.5th deer. It began hunting last year and was successful right out of the gate. It’s taking me time to figure out distance shots, like 95-110 yards.
Intriguing. I did have it zeroed dead-on for 100 yards. It's that last 25 yards beyond that I need to figure out. It appears that the 335-grain lead ball is perfectly centered in the bullseye at 100 yards, and then drops like a cinder block a couple yards beyond that distance.Couple things. You can use your front sight as a simple rangefinder. An adult deer broadside is about 18” from belly to withers (vertically just behind the front leg.) northern deer are a few inches over that, but close enough for use here.
Take an 18x11 sheet of paper and learn how it compares to your front sight at various ranges. Make notes. I’ve been known to etch this info on the inside of a patch box (minds are for thinking, paper is for remembering.)
Shooting at distance is easy, just hold center and watch on paper targets at each range how the ball drops. One target and you moving back in 10 yard increments make this easy. Now you know your drop, just apply that to the target while thinking about the size (18”) of the target.
I zero my .62 rifles dead on at 75. Down about three at 100 and 5/6” at 125. I know that as long as the target is not further than 125 yards, I simply hold just below the top of the back (on hair) and let fly. Don’t over complicate it worrying about “Where do I hold?” for 95 vs 115 yards.
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