Well I went for powder today in Atlanta, I had the day off from doctors appointments so I made a trip to the shop where they have lots of muzzleloaders and supplies. I had been thinking of getting a 32 cal rifle so I asked if he had any, There was a few crockets in 32 and other rifles in cap so I just milled around a little and thought nothing more of a rifle. I went into the powder locker for a couple cans of 3F and took them to the counter. Well, that was when the trouble started, The owner had forgot about a 32 cal flinter on the wall behind the counter. He grabbed it from the wall and handed it over to me. I am weak and I must have a magnet attached to me because it is here at home.
Now for some pics.
Anyone know what kind of lock that is?
The front
The nose
The butt
And some 50 yard results after I got used to the sights and trigger.
and from a supported position
Well as you can see I had to go to my range a throw some lead. I shot about 20 rounds and of that I think the rifle failed to fire the pan (3 times)-- changer flints--cure that, Failed to fire the main charge (10-12 times)-- stared to pick the touch hole and it improved but didn't cure it all. All in all I knew I had some work to do so when I got home the rifle was stripped. Now I did run a patch at the shop and everything seamed o.k.---- BUT--- when I unscrewed the breech I found a half inch of crude in there. I noticed the touchhole liner projected into the barrel and was not allowing the jag or a scrapper to go to the plug. I worked on it for a while by taking the file to it and now that is fixed, I believe this is why I had some problems with ignition. The fellow who built the rifle kind of cut a few corners, the liner thing, he browned the barrel (looks to me the barrel was in the stock at the time) and the bottom was collecting some pretty nasty rust. The back of the lock looked o.k. but I scrubbed it anyway. I did have to make a rod for it, the one that I got with the rifle was short and it had no cap for attaching tools. I didn't get to nail down a load but that is what I will be doing this weekend. I used 20 grains of 3F, .310 ball, and a .015 patch. Looks like I don't have to monkey around with the load too much.
Now for some pics.
Anyone know what kind of lock that is?
The front
The nose
The butt
And some 50 yard results after I got used to the sights and trigger.
and from a supported position
Well as you can see I had to go to my range a throw some lead. I shot about 20 rounds and of that I think the rifle failed to fire the pan (3 times)-- changer flints--cure that, Failed to fire the main charge (10-12 times)-- stared to pick the touch hole and it improved but didn't cure it all. All in all I knew I had some work to do so when I got home the rifle was stripped. Now I did run a patch at the shop and everything seamed o.k.---- BUT--- when I unscrewed the breech I found a half inch of crude in there. I noticed the touchhole liner projected into the barrel and was not allowing the jag or a scrapper to go to the plug. I worked on it for a while by taking the file to it and now that is fixed, I believe this is why I had some problems with ignition. The fellow who built the rifle kind of cut a few corners, the liner thing, he browned the barrel (looks to me the barrel was in the stock at the time) and the bottom was collecting some pretty nasty rust. The back of the lock looked o.k. but I scrubbed it anyway. I did have to make a rod for it, the one that I got with the rifle was short and it had no cap for attaching tools. I didn't get to nail down a load but that is what I will be doing this weekend. I used 20 grains of 3F, .310 ball, and a .015 patch. Looks like I don't have to monkey around with the load too much.