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Author Topic: Rock Pit Shooting  (Read 1950 times)

Offline Sabotloader

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Rock Pit Shooting
« on: March 28, 2013, 04:36:25 PM »
Made another shooting trip today.  It rained pretty decently last night, so I figured the farm would be muddy, so I headed to the Rock Pit.  This time of the year I really do not like going to the Rock Pit, one because of the nice day somebody might already be there and two- the trash in the pit.  It just bugs me that we shooters can get so messy.  I really wonder why the people do not realize they are shooting themselves in the foot.  The mess which will need to be cleaned up by US Forest Service people is gong to cost and cause a lot of hard feelings.  It is only a matter of time and the FS is going to close the pit or the road to the pit.  It you take it in - take it out

Anyway back to the point of the trip.  I wanted to complete sighting the rifle in at 100 yards.  I did set up a paper target and took two shots on the target.  From my 50 yard target yesterday I ended up moving 2 clicks left and 6 clicks up.  Took the 3rd shot at the paper and I was at noon and right at 2.75" inches high. 

I had moved back to do-it-all load for the rifle .458-275 gr. Bloodline in a red Knight sabot.  T7-2f powder - 110 grains by volume - thrown on site.

Here are some pictures of the outing... I really think the rifle is ready - now if hunting season would just get here - QUICKLY...



The last two shots of the afternoon were the fun ones.  I picked out a Clay Pigeon Chip on the wall of the rock pit.  It seemed like a chip that probably was about a 1/3rd to 1/2 of the original bird.  Ranged it @ 109 yards, it was laying in loose soil so I was going to have to hit it to get rid of it.  I did get it but it took two shots.

These are the spent primers from the shoot... I really like the looks of them.



Next trip - the plan is to get some velocities shooting through the chrono...
Keep shooting muzzleloaders - They are a blast!!

Offline kerrdog

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Re: Rock Pit Shooting
« Reply #1 on: March 29, 2013, 07:11:55 AM »
Those bloodline .458s with red sabots are really hard to load in my disk extreme.  It takes everything I have to get the first one down, and #2 is just ridiculous.  :dunno:  Which sabot is thinner than the red? 


Offline Sabotloader

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Re: Rock Pit Shooting
« Reply #2 on: March 29, 2013, 08:43:18 AM »
Those bloodline .458s with red sabots are really hard to load in my disk extreme.  It takes everything I have to get the first one down, and #2 is just ridiculous.  :dunno:  Which sabot is thinner than the red?

There really is not much variety in 458 sabots... The red one from Knight and the Orange one from MMP but the Knight red version is built by MMP...

Do you have a bottle of JB's bore paste?  With a treatment of JB's your problems might get solved... Let me know and I share a method of working the bore to get it to open just a bit...

I think I have a written explanation for it I will see if I can find it...

Here is the first part that I would share with you..

http://www.brownells.com/.aspx/lid=13084/guntechdetail/Using_JB_Bore_Paste_and_Kroil_with_the_VFG_Bore_Pellets

Here is what I do along the lines of the video shown above..

Quote from: sabotloader
Quote from: OzarkPA
Howdy SL -
When you ran your JB paste in your bore - did you just oil a patch and coat with paste and run it with your jag?
 
Thanks,
Geoff

Yes, you might have to double your patch to get a tight fit. But I ran an oiled patch with JB's smeared on the sides...ran that side 25 strokes top to bottom (important) then flip the patch over and run another 25 strokes. Did this 4 times then clean up the bore and see what you might have accomplished... On my Triumph I think I ran this operation twice.
 
Hope this helps[/color]

mike

If you want to give this a try let me know and we should talk...

« Last Edit: March 29, 2013, 08:49:21 AM by Sabotloader »
Keep shooting muzzleloaders - They are a blast!!

 


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