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Author Topic: Muzzleloaders  (Read 15356 times)

Offline lokidog

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Re: Muzzleloaders
« Reply #15 on: October 13, 2015, 09:46:25 AM »
Traditional with the removable breach plug advantage and faster lock time than a side hammer....

Offline TopOfTheFoodChain

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Re: Muzzleloaders
« Reply #16 on: October 26, 2015, 01:37:40 AM »
Traditional? Jean Samuel Pauley patented the first in line action in 1812. That's only four years after Forsyth invented the percussion system.

So is inline, percussion or flintlock traditional?

I do hope Washington keeps some limits on it. No smokeless, no scopes, no primers, no electronic ignition.

I hunt with inline but had way more fun before Doc White and Tony Knight made inline what they are today. Killed a lot of animals with that old kit gun and prb.
« Last Edit: October 26, 2015, 11:24:24 PM by TopOfTheFoodChain »

Offline PyroBlack

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Re: Muzzleloaders
« Reply #17 on: October 26, 2015, 08:33:58 PM »
Did your inline of 1812 have a removable breechplug, 1-20s twists and 209 ignition?
If not, then are you still thinking that 1812'er isn't considered traditional today?

BTW..... 209 primers improve ignition and scopes improve humane harvests. Now that's more fun than the fun you used to have.

Offline TopOfTheFoodChain

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Re: Muzzleloaders
« Reply #18 on: October 26, 2015, 11:49:20 PM »
We had way more fun when a lot of units were open for either sex deer and elk and you could hunt coweeman all day and only see one or two other hunters. You could spend 3 hours getting close only to have wet powder and then try again later in the next cut.
Then inlines gained popularity and all the sudden guys everywhere wearing blue jeans, driving to landings, glassing while smoking and talking loudly with engines still running.

Yes, we were down in the bottoms of those cuts and tree lines already, been there for years and still watch guys road hunting.
 
Yes, love my inline now. I take full advantage of what's legal. I shoot very comfortably out to 300 yards with peep/globe sights and know each of my guns ballistics. My White has just over 10.5 feet of drop with a 460 grain Bullet at 300 yards. I took one follow up shot on a spike elk last year at 325/yards and hit it because I am comfortable doing it and know the gun is capable. That was fun.

But I really miss the good days before inlines became so popular. You haven't experienced muzzeloading until you try to keep the powder dry all day in the rain so you can take a shot with patched round balls from an old kit gun or Kentucky long...

 


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