You know, I felt kind of weird selecting the flintlock option because I have 2 agendas for this year's gun seasons. I want to use my scoped 20 gauge shotgun to try and get a mature buck, and get a deer with a muzzleloader and with a flintlock. Well, I've gotten a lot better with the flintlock and it's a muzzleloader so it gets 2 of my 3 wants for the deer season. Because there wouldn't be enough time to get a deer with the slug gun, flinter, and caplock so the flintlock and shotgun win. Plus cleaning up my flintlock is so much easier than that traditions caplock. I've established a load with my .54 lyman trade rifle flinter. .530 Hornady ball with a .016 cotton drill patch in front of 90 grains of 3f grafs black powder. As long as my flint is positioned forward enough in the jaws and is sharp the gun is very reliable. Last weekend I was shooting a pretty well at 40 yards off-hand. By hunting season I think my top range will be 50 yards off-hand and maybe a bit further with a rest. I know some of you may scoff at me wanting to also use a modern scoped shotgun but the area that I will hunt with the shotgun is pretty open and shots can be anywhere from 30-200 yards. I can only shoot to 150 with my shotgun but my dad has got some deer at 200 yards. Anyway I don't think I'd ever even want a muzzleloader that can shoot past 100 because then it seems too much like an inline.