Free: Contests & Raffles.
Hi folks. I posted something similar to this on the Elk Forum but I wanted your expert opinions from the muzxleloader section. I have hunted the Merrill ring pshyyt tree farm for many years. As many of you know they only sell 150 permits to the 60,000 acre land. Of those 150 permits three individuals are drawn to take a bull elk. After a long time of trying I have fortunately been drawn to take a bull elk this season. After much debate and thought I have decided to hunt with A muzzle loader during the first week of October.I am not a complete rookie with Blackpowder and have taken 4 Blacktail deer in my life using a Thompson Center Black Diamond XR 50 caliber. However I sold it many years ago and now I am in the market for a new muzzleloader that is Northwest legal. I used to use the Blackdiamond with a 405 grain powerbelt and 110 g of Pyrodex and it was very accurate offhand up to 100 yards. However cleaning the thing was a real pain in the butt. What do you guys recommend now for a good quality accurate, and reliable muzzle that is easy to clean? Thanks in advance.
i have an original knigt DISC before the extreme came out and love it . great gun easy to clean reliable . i shoot knight bloodline 300gr with 110 gr fffg powder and the spike i took last year dropped hard and found bullet fragments in the heart and lungs. bullet preformed awesomely. listen to sabotloader he knows his stuff.
Quote from: scottcrb on May 25, 2015, 11:26:02 AMi have an original knigt DISC before the extreme came out and love it . great gun easy to clean reliable . i shoot knight bloodline 300gr with 110 gr fffg powder and the spike i took last year dropped hard and found bullet fragments in the heart and lungs. bullet preformed awesomely. listen to sabotloader he knows his stuff.with all due respect if your bullet fragmented i'd hardly say it performed flawlessly. I understand it dropped which is what we always want but I never want a bullet to fragment
That makes perfect sense. I was envisioning a bullet that fragmented like a varmint bullet. Thanks for the clarification!
I absolutely love the thumb hole stock. Super comfortable to shoot. Can be a tad bulkier than other stocks but the reward is worth it.
I've been watching this thread closely since I'm also looking for my first Muzzle loader for elk hunting. As of right now I'd say my three likely choices are Knight Bighorn, Knight Disc extreme or CVA optima. I'd say my front runner is the Knight Bighorn, the price seems decent for what seems to be a good quality gun. Anyone have any thoughts on the thumb hole stocks?