I'm curious to know what was your first BlackPowder firearm? Was it a rifle or a smoothbore?
What made you want to buy it?
How experienced/knowledgeable with this sport/hobby were you, when you bought your first BlackPowder gun?
Not my first muzzleloader, two rifles of note.
The upper gun is a Pedersoli .50 calibre Alamo Rifle. I bought the gun at a pawnshop back in the late 80’s/early 90’s. It’s fairly light to carry in the woods. with a 7/8” barrel, 36” in length. 100 grains of ffg and a patched RB was my standard hunting load in this gun, putting shots into an 1 1/2” to 2” group at 100 yrds. I hunted with this gun for many many years, taking deer and lots of elk. The gun never failed me when I needed it to go boom. It was a meat making machine. When I retired my CVA .50 calibre Mountain Rifle, the Alamo Rifle became my goto gun. It’s lighter, and just as accurate. At the time I was enthralled by finally having a gun with a full stock. Everyone had half-stock CVAs, Thompson Centers, Lyman’s. I would shoot this gun up until I switched over to shooting flintlocks, around 15-20 years ago.
The lower gun was purchased at a Rendezvous; at that time it was a .32 calibre Dixie Tennessee Mountain rifle. I hunted small game with this little .32 for many years, but the accuracy was just never as good as my Pedersoli .32 BlueRidge percussion. So I recently had this gun rebarreled with a 36” Corleraine barrel, in .45 calibre. I wanted a .40 calibre, but after 3 weeks of searching, .45 is what I could find. This gun is probably my most accurate flintlock…well maybe I should say it’s my flintlock that I can shoot most accurately. Using 55 grains fffg and blue pillow ticking, at 50 yards the group is a single ragged hole, at 100 yards the gun groups right around 1 1/2”. I’ve become so impressed with the feel, balance, handle-ability, and accuracy of this rifle….that I went out and bought another Dixie Tennessee Mountain Rifle in .50 calibre. I just ordered a 36” Corleraine barrel in .54 calibre, so when it’s done I’ll have a matched pair of these rifle. The .54 should be 1 pound heavier than the .45…very excited about this project.