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I replaced the sear spring on an old CVA mountain rifle that broke on me last week while attempting to shoot it.. At the same session I was trying to get a old navy arms Kentucky rifle sighted in and was just about there when the rear sight fell off. Someone did a poor job at filing the dovetail on it. I replaced the sight with a new one. I bought these in a small collection and finally getting around to using them. Both .45's are from the mid 1970's. Maybe if time allows I can shoot them today.
Ya ever get a loose dovetail like that again ....you can " dimple " the bottom of the dovetail up with a punch or nail set ... Tightens it right back up .... Good shootin !
 
That’s good to know, I’ve always wondered what sort of damage/ballistics a patched round ball has on a deer, or if I’ll have to track them far. Obviously shot placement is key, but from your story it seems that a round ball is no slouch compared to like a sabot or conical,if the shooter does his part.
As others have said, a round ball is quite capable. Like all firearms of choice, placement with the round ball rifle is critical; match the size of the ball to the game, don't attempt a shot where the outcome is uncertain, shoot within range, use a rest whenever and wherever you can and @jesse_ennis, you will bring home the bacon. Oh, and get as close as you can - the stalk toward the game is what gets my heart pumping.

Cheers, Pete

Round ball.jpg
 
A necessary decision872B0E4F-D09E-437B-ABF7-F9C7497531F6_1_201_a.jpegthe left hand cabella's 50 barrel...which I wouldn't have bought if I'd known it was a leftie...is now a right hand barrel. The decision was in the fitting. Snuggedup the flats were one flat off...ok...a third of a flat...maybe less. Instead of all that work fitting...I made an executive decision. A brass shim.
 
Compulsively refreshing shipping information for my Kibler kit. Hasn't moved in 28 hours... Could have been delivered today but USPS insists on holding things for no reason.
 
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