Pete G
76 Cal.
I knew guy who called them all "Musket Loaders"I hate being "that guy" so if people mean well I just let it be.
"Musket" is just a blanket term a lot of people use.
I knew guy who called them all "Musket Loaders"I hate being "that guy" so if people mean well I just let it be.
"Musket" is just a blanket term a lot of people use.
You're right on the money!Actually, Zouave is a made up fictitious name with no real historical context, other than some troops that were called Zuoaves after the French originals may have been issued these rifles at some point, and if so it was likely after the war.
The term Zuoave was coined by Val Forgett of Navy Arms when he commissioned the reproduction of the Remington Model 1863 Contract Rifle. He initially was going to call them Remingtons, and indeed the first locks said Remington on them, but "Big Green" took exception to his using their name and told him to cease and desist, so he came up with the catchy Zuoave moniker, which, seemingly has as much or more flair than Remington, especially these days.
As far as projectiles, these arms were designed to use Minies and in historically correct context that is what they fired for the most part (in actuality the Remington 1863 saw little or no use in the War of Northern Aggression) That being so 99% of the time I am using a Lee .578, 478 grain home cast Minie in mine
I just read an old article in the old Home Guide Muzzle Loaders book that stated the Zouaves armed many union troops, but yet I have read it didn't see issuance in many articles..
I don't know, I wasn't there.
I wonder if connivence didnāt play a roll. Folks getting in to the centennial of the WBTS were of the generation of WW2 and Korean War vets. By this time guns with barrels in the thirty inch range was the norm. And here is a war rifle with that size. To a man that shot an m1 or most of the hunting rifles the Remington didnāt look clumsy.Most of the Remington 1863 Contract Rifles sat in warehouses at the end of the war and there is very little evidence of any being actually issued to U.S. troops. They were sold as surplus some time after the war, to Bannerman's and to European countries in need of extra arms.
Most were/are in relatively good condition compared to the Springfields and Enfields that saw much hard use in the war. It is likely because of their being more easily obtainable in finer condition and their availability in Europe, that Val Forgett chose the Remington to be the first rifle he commissioned for reproduction in Italy rather than the more ubiquitous Springfield or Enfield.
From Cottageville SC You close by ?Minie Ball is the only way to go, excellent for hunting and target shooting
What is Armi? ArmiSport?Need advice... I have the option to buy an Armi zouave in good condition older Or a Chiappa new excellent. Chiappa is a bit more. Trying to figure out what's the better option??
The limited, specialist market for these interesting but limited-use muskets kind of keeps a market from developing. Many of us older guys that recall or "were in" the Civil War Centennial are aging out now, and there simply is not the large pool of young guys itching to get into re-enacting. This is where small shops and de-farbers can fill the demand, but the days that you recall above are gone for good! It was indeed a magical time.Thats the best thing about the 1841s, they can be modified into models that most people have never seen or heard of.
there were so many different carbines, muskets, rifles, and rifled-muskets used during the ACW, its a shame that nobody reproduces them. Like a Whiteney Militia Rifle! parts 1841,1855, and CS Richmond all rolled into 1 rifle!!! Or a Georgia Armory rifle, Springfield 1857 Cadet musket or 1847 musketoon!!!
years ago there were repro colts, 1841s 1855s, 1863s, 1864s, heck a walk threw Sutlers Row you could buy almost anything repro or original.......now its all dried up and all you see is repro 1861s and Enfields
It was made for the minnie. And made for man incapacitating. It doesnāt matter to an army of the other guy is dead or wounded. On a WTBS battlefield wounded out numbered dead anywhere from three to one to five to one.
You donāt want that hunting. You want clean quick kills. That means minnie or ball get close. Around a hundred yards max range.
I shot mine with ball. Because I like ball.
I got better accuracy with an eighty grain charge and patched ball then the sixty grain service charge and minnie.
The boys that shoot these for smallest groups often shoot lighter charges, forty grain range. They do that for a reason that visible on their targets.
But you go all the way to sixty or sixty five, and a fat WTBS minnie or even one of the heaviest.58 you get deer dropping accuracy at a hundred yards. Lots better then round ball in my smoothie
Shoot them both see what you like better. Both will serve you well.....
of course real men shoot ball, from flint guns and real men spend a lot more time āround the fire talking then shooting.... well letās not go there
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