Juggernaut
40 Cal.
- Joined
- Jan 21, 2006
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Weather proofing your flash pan. I was headed out the other morning for a hunt and noticed it was raining. I’m not a fair weather hunter I figure if the deer are in the rain I can hunt them in the rain.
These are a few tips I have learned over the last 30 years of hunting with black powder.
I weather proof one of two ways and both work just as well. I use a cows knee but you still have to remove to fire and in a rain this still can effect your priming charge.
When loading the main charge I meter the powder as usual. Then before the patch I put a small piece of cellophane “saran wrap” over the muzzle then the lubed patch followed by the ball. The cellophane is cut by the muzzle crown and is cut to the perfect diameter of the bore. Thus protecting the charge from moisture. And being made of cellulose burns away upon ignition. I found the patch can and has transferred moisture thought the cotton patch in the past hunting in these adverse conditions. Even the lube can contaminate the main charge and effect firing. The second step can be done one of two ways. The first being I charge the flash pan with my priming charge of FFFFg in the normal standard manner. After closing the frizzen on the flash pan I either take wax or shot lube and seal the frizzen to the flash pan. Wax works better since it becomes a solid and does not get messy plus the wax peels off and removes easier.Both are burned away when you fire.
I have taken an old Flinter and submerged completely in water and she still fired I did this at hunting camp to prove to some hunting colleges that it really works. This works for me you guys may want to change or alter it to suit your personal shooting habits.
Thanks I hope this helps!!!
Juggernaut
These are a few tips I have learned over the last 30 years of hunting with black powder.
I weather proof one of two ways and both work just as well. I use a cows knee but you still have to remove to fire and in a rain this still can effect your priming charge.
When loading the main charge I meter the powder as usual. Then before the patch I put a small piece of cellophane “saran wrap” over the muzzle then the lubed patch followed by the ball. The cellophane is cut by the muzzle crown and is cut to the perfect diameter of the bore. Thus protecting the charge from moisture. And being made of cellulose burns away upon ignition. I found the patch can and has transferred moisture thought the cotton patch in the past hunting in these adverse conditions. Even the lube can contaminate the main charge and effect firing. The second step can be done one of two ways. The first being I charge the flash pan with my priming charge of FFFFg in the normal standard manner. After closing the frizzen on the flash pan I either take wax or shot lube and seal the frizzen to the flash pan. Wax works better since it becomes a solid and does not get messy plus the wax peels off and removes easier.Both are burned away when you fire.
I have taken an old Flinter and submerged completely in water and she still fired I did this at hunting camp to prove to some hunting colleges that it really works. This works for me you guys may want to change or alter it to suit your personal shooting habits.
Thanks I hope this helps!!!
Juggernaut