KyHeadhunter
32 Cal.
- Joined
- Nov 11, 2003
- Messages
- 26
- Reaction score
- 0
Went to the range after work today with my new (to me) T/C Pennsylvania Hunter flintlock. 1st time ever shooting a flintlock. Got it a week ago in a trade with an older gentleman who wanted a modern muzzleloader that he could scope as his eyesight is starting to fade. Having traded in my modern archery gear for self-made hickory longbows some time back, this seemed like the kind of old-school gun I could relate to.
What a rush the first time that pan flashed! Lo & behold, it actually fired, I must've done something right! Two rounds later, I went down to check the target, and found three 1/2" holes overlapping in the bull. Before anyone goes thinking what a great shot I am, it was at 25 yards from a semi-prone position (sitting, trigger elbow resting on table but forestock supported freehand). That gentleman wasn't whistlin Dixie when he told me it was dead on with 80 grains FFFG behind .490 roundball with 0.015" patching. Said it was that way right out of the box when he bought it, sights have never been adjusted.
Just wanted to say thanks to all for the great advice I've found on this forum in the last week. How much prime, don't cover the touchhole, etc. In particular, I picked up one nugget that I suspect will help more than any other single tip I'll ever get- "...give yourself up for dead" is how the poster described the proper way to shoot a flintlock. Couldn't ignore the flash from the prime, but by "giving up for dead", I kept from getting a death grip & flinching- at least until after the ball had cleared the barrel.
What a rush the first time that pan flashed! Lo & behold, it actually fired, I must've done something right! Two rounds later, I went down to check the target, and found three 1/2" holes overlapping in the bull. Before anyone goes thinking what a great shot I am, it was at 25 yards from a semi-prone position (sitting, trigger elbow resting on table but forestock supported freehand). That gentleman wasn't whistlin Dixie when he told me it was dead on with 80 grains FFFG behind .490 roundball with 0.015" patching. Said it was that way right out of the box when he bought it, sights have never been adjusted.
Just wanted to say thanks to all for the great advice I've found on this forum in the last week. How much prime, don't cover the touchhole, etc. In particular, I picked up one nugget that I suspect will help more than any other single tip I'll ever get- "...give yourself up for dead" is how the poster described the proper way to shoot a flintlock. Couldn't ignore the flash from the prime, but by "giving up for dead", I kept from getting a death grip & flinching- at least until after the ball had cleared the barrel.