Crane Senior
40 Cal
This has been great, I really appreciate all the comments and advice. Thank you everyone for your time and expertise.
Guess I should have written that differently so people wouldn't misconstrue it.Guessing you hunt without a ramrod, powder or extra roundball, so as to assist in helping your pinpoint focus. No need for extra flint or if going percussion, weighing yourself down with a second percussion cap. Must lighten the load.
Usually I don't get a second shot at an animal that I have missed with the first shot. They usually don't stick around long enough no matter how fast I can reload.
I agree, working on shooting a specific pig target. My only response is small target, small miss. Practice, practice, practice.Tiny groups are great at a target shoot. They are not needed for hunting big game.
If you need a second shot, like approaching a hog that may not be dead, skip the patch. Be sure to seat the ball hard to make sure is stays on the powder.
As has others have said use a looser combo. 100 yards is a long shot in the real world of open sights and round balls. You do not need guilt edge target accuracy. Minuet of paper plate is sufficient at 100 yards. 4" at 50 yards is sufficient too. You can achieve that with a loose combination. Try 490 or even 485 balls. A 485 with a thicker patch will load easier and the patch will carry more lube for your second shot.
I agree on a clean miss, what happens if you don’t make a kill shot, but miss slightly and wound the animal? Don’t you want a second second shot as soon as possible to follow up? I can’t stand a suffering animal, it’s my responsibility to be as ethical as possible and be prepared for any eventuality.That's the point I was making, usually it's a one shot deal anyway .
Give up on the notion of a second shot, focus on the first shot.
Nope, no lug. If the pig was that mad and came at me, I'd either look for a tree or use my rifle as a club. The chances of my climbing a tree quickly are nil! So to everyone's point, make the first shot count, totally agree.Do you have a bayonet lug on that rifle? Has a lot to do with how bad you need a second shot...
ConcurExactly. Anyone that says they dont care about a second shot, isn't a hunter. For hogs, you damn sure want a quick follow up shot.
Lookie, perfect example just took place at home. This is why you want a second shot
I bought a .50 cal GM drop in for my T/C many years ago from Tip Curtis. His partial advice on proper use, was to swab (once down & up) first with a damp (not wet) patch and then a dry one, between EVERY shot.I have a 50 cal Hawken type I’ve put together with the barrel being the Green Mountain drop in TC replacement. It’s a 1/66 twist and is dead on accurate at 100 yds with a .495 ball, .015 patch (1:6 Ballistol mix dry patch) and 80 gr 2F Goex and or 80gr Swiss 1.5. I want to use this load next week to hunt pigs. The problem is that I can use the wooden ram rod for the first load, but cannot get the second load down without using my range rod. I can get about 3/4 of the way down the barrel with the wooden rod and that’s it. The barrel probably has 150 rounds through it and looks clean as can be to me, no pits and no rings.
I have a feeling I know what next steps might be, but would appreciate hearing from the more seasoned folk on this forum.
Nope, no lug. If the pig was that mad and came at me, I'd either look for a tree or use my rifle as a club. The chances of my climbing a tree quickly are nil! So to everyone's point, make the first shot count, totally agree.
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