• Friends, our 2nd Amendment rights are always under attack and the NRA has been a constant for decades in helping fight that fight.

    We have partnered with the NRA to offer you a discount on membership and Muzzleloading Forum gets a small percentage too of each membership, so you are supporting both the NRA and us.

    Use this link to sign up please; https://membership.nra.org/recruiters/join/XR045103

touch hole liner

Muzzleloading Forum

Help Support Muzzleloading Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

chipper c

32 Cal.
Joined
Jul 17, 2011
Messages
28
Reaction score
0
How many flintlock shooter's remove the touch hole liner each time you clean your flintlock, and what are the signs that it may need replacement? :confused: Thank You for your info. :)
 
As witnessed recently, the way to tell if it needs replaced is if half your charge comes spewing out the liner hole.
:rotf:

I remove mine every 3 shoots or so. Maybe more. But as far as I understand, it isn't necessary to remove it.
 
I've been shooting flintlocks for many years. (1977 on) and have never removed one to clean. I have not had problems with them going off if I have a good flint. I have only had to replace one because I made it out of a steel setscrew. I changed to stainless steel and even my 20 year old flintlock still has the original home made ss setscrew liner in it and I don't think it looses any of the main charge, it still hits the witness mark I have on the ramrod. I use to shoot with the New York State flint team so my old rifle has seen a lot of shooting.

Jim
 
I never have removed it for cleaning. One of my flinters I've been shooting about 20 years and it hasn't hurt it yet :thumbsup:
 
chipper c said:
How many flintlock shooter's remove the touch hole liner each time you clean your flintlock, and what are the signs that it may need replacement? :confused: Thank You for your info. :)

Not a necessary or reccomended procedure. You can't remove a liner on a rifle that doesn't have one. A liner is a semi-permanent part of the rifle.
 
I do not remove the touch hole liner when I clean my flintlocks.

The vent hole is large enough to work nicely when I use the 'breach in the bucket of water and pump' method of cleaning so I have found no good reason for removing it.

I do remove the nipple on a percussion gun when I clean that though.

The nipples very small .028-.030 diameter hole in a nipple won't flow enough water to allow the water to flow rapidly thru the barrel/breech when using my cleaning method.
 
Gun hygiene and personal hygiene, how often do you take a bath and brush your teeth?

It's all personal. Clean guns are happy.
 
I clean my flintlock with water and I am concerned that the barrel side of the threads can rust the touch hole threads fast making it hard for the touch hole to eventuality be replaced with a new one! :confused: Thank You for your info. :)
 
chipper c said:
I clean my flintlock with water and I am concerned that the barrel side of the threads can rust the touch hole threads fast making it hard for the touch hole to eventuality be replaced with a new one! :confused: Thank You for your info. :)
Using a good water-displacing lubricant such as WD-40 in the cleaning process will eliminate that concern.
 
To avoid any chance of water remaining in the breech threads, after cleaning it I put the breech area of the barrel over the gas burner on my kitchen stove.
Heating it just until I can hear the sizzles of whatever water is still inside I then spray a liberal dose of Barricade down the barrel.

A few wipes with a clean patch distributes the Barricade thruout the length of the bore.

I must point out that I always remove my guns barrel before cleaning it so this heating step doesn't set the stock on fire. :grin:

For those that don't want to heat their barrels, WD40 which was mentioned by others was originally designed to remove water from small areas. That's what the WD stands for: Water Displacement.
It goes into small areas and pushes the water out of them.

Although WD40 by itself isn't much of a rust preventative, it does remove the water very well.
 
I check the diameter with a "plug " gauge and if isn't burned oversize I don't mess with it! :hmm:
 
You do not need to remove your touch hole liner in order to properly clean your flintlock. :nono: The only time you need to remove your touch hole liner is if the hole becomes too large. Under normal use, this will take a long time. I have been shooting for many years and have never had to replace a touch hole liner because the hole had become too large.
 
Back
Top