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Author Topic: First Muzzeloader  (Read 9529 times)

Offline pickardjw

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First Muzzeloader
« on: March 28, 2022, 03:40:25 PM »
Looking to buy my first muzzleloader. Thought I had decided on the Traditions Buckstalker XT until I read some bad reviews on forums. Seems like the other reviews I read may not have been particularly valuable and the brand isn't quite as good as others.

CVA and T/C seem to be more reputable brands. Looking at CVA, does the Optima perform better than the Wolf to justify the price difference? I've read that the trigger guard breech lever is kind of annoying and can get hung up and inadvertantly open.

The T/C impact seems to be the only model they have under $500. How does it compare to the Wolf and Optima? I've read different opinions on it's breech pull action, that it can be tough to operate with gloves or when it's cold.

Thoughts on which of these three has the best trigger as well?

Offline phildobaggins

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Re: First Muzzeloader
« Reply #1 on: March 28, 2022, 04:23:50 PM »
I have a T/C Impact. I think I got it new on sale for like $130, can't complain at that price. I've shot two deer with it. Pretty short barrel, not too good at distance in my experience. The trigger on it is amazing. Wish I could speak to the others you're looking at.

Offline duckmen1

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Re: First Muzzeloader
« Reply #2 on: March 28, 2022, 04:40:28 PM »
My personal experience with traditions was a bad one. Athough fairly accurate I had nothing but issues with the evolution. I picked up a TC system one which is a plunger  slide and love it. Although cleaning is the only downfall as you have to dissassemble the entire gun. A little excessive to clean but a great gun. A little outdated for twist rates for modern bullets but great gun non the less. No complaints with my experience with TC. But for todays lineup in muzzleloaders I love Knight rifles. Again went with the knight bighorn which is a plunger slide ignition using musket caps. Got it on sale when I purchased the gun for about $380. Love the gun in every way. Super accurate, solid built gun. Always reliable. Never lets me down. Have dropped a lot of animals with the knight and the TC. But primary carry now is the knight. Aside from the Traditions my guns have always been reliable. A lot of people are switching to 209s which is good but I won't be changing from musket caps any time soon. What ever your decision is good luck and hope people can help with the possible rifles you are interested in and give solid info for you to make your decision.
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Offline JakeLand

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Re: First Muzzeloader
« Reply #3 on: March 28, 2022, 05:34:22 PM »
I started with a cva and shot a couple elk under 100 yards I bought a knight disc extreme just cause it was a great deal and couldn’t pass it up . After shooting it and getting great groups out at distance and how natural they feel to shoot I sold the cva accura and never turned back

Offline haftard

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Re: First Muzzeloader
« Reply #4 on: March 28, 2022, 07:23:35 PM »
i love my cva optima. ive killed 3 bulls and 1 cow with it in 4 years. ive only shot it on paper twice. once to sight it in and once to check it after i droped it right on the peep. now my wife has the cva wolf. its an awesome gun for the money. the wolf is alittle lighter then the optima but the wolf is more front heavy. both guns shoot great. have not have an issue, but i will say the "coating" they put on the guns comes off after about 3 years and you start to get rust issues. but that can be fixed with a much needed cerakoat ( how ever the hell you spell that damn word) the stainless barrel is what busted me this year from having 4 bulls in 4 years. how ever i still love the gun. i think i pickd up my optima for 200$ and i got the wolf for 160$.

my brother has the tc encor muzzleloader and its a pretty sweet gun too. but i have little to no first hand experience with it. other then he says he likes the gun.

my uncles have the Acura and honlestly i dont see the reason for paying that much for a muzzleloader you have to use open sights with.  they are pretty sweet and as soon as i draw a muzzloader tag where i can use optics ill go out and buy one. but at the same time i have my optima that is a solid shooter.

lastly BULLET SELECTOIN IS KEY. yes guys have killed critters with a 50 cal round ball, but its not 1776 any more. i have yet to see a poor result when shooting monolithic bullets designed to be shot out of a muzzleloader at slower speeds. personaly i shoot the kinght bloodlines in a 350g. and ill start shooting the 300s once i run out of 350s. every elk ive shot with it has gone less then 100 yards. little blood shot, and ive recovered all but one slug. the barns tsx bullets and other barns options have done amazing also. the reason im telling you this is we have lost 2 or 3 bulls in hunting camp due to the poor design of power belt bullets and we almost lost a cow due to them.
POW'shooting a power belt' . smoke clears.. she is getting back up.. 'then i shoot' pow. dumped her. when we where gutting her out the power belt had hit the shoulder blade. broke it. and stoped. didnt pernitrate more then about 3 inches. and if you watch the meat eater episode when steve is muzzleloader hunting in colorado. he hit a bull high in the shoulder. it looks as if the bullet hit the shoulder blade and didnt pernitrate at all. if i ever get a chance to talk to steve personally i would love to ask him about that bull and how the tracks looked.
any who . hope i answered a few of your questions. hope you find what your looking for and if you didnt. i hope your only take away from my post is to try your best to shoot a monolithic solid copper or brass bullet.

ps sorry for the typos and miss spelling

Offline bkaech

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Re: First Muzzeloader
« Reply #5 on: March 28, 2022, 08:28:13 PM »
I have a CVA optima and LOVE it. I love the trigger guard break action, works great and never had an issue with it and I can't imagine anyone walking through more brush than I do when I hunt. I also love the trigger, but I have not shot a lot of really good rifles. The thing is awesome, shots good, and handles well for me. I have not owned any other muzzleloader but have hunting partners with Knight bolt action muzzy's and some with traditions. I honestly think mine is the best and the only reason I would hunt with a different muzzy is if I got a Hawkins or plainsman style traditional muzzy.

Offline DeerThug

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Re: First Muzzeloader
« Reply #6 on: March 28, 2022, 09:12:10 PM »
I have what is probably the first Traditions that was made.  My dad bought it for me for Christmas like 25 years ago or so.  Pretty sure it was the cheapest muzzle loader that there was at the time.  That gun has killed a ton of deer and elk and even a cougar.  Tough as nails, never a misfire and pretty accurate.  My son and I used to both hunt with it and share it and more than once it killed two deer in the same day.  I have no reason to buy anything else.

All of your choices are equally lethal.  As mentioned bullet choice is, in my opinion,
 more important that the gun it is shot out of.

I think a Traditions will serve you well.  Find one that you like and can afford, learn to shoot it and the rest will work out. 
Shoot straight Shoot often

Offline teanawayslayer

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Re: First Muzzeloader
« Reply #7 on: March 28, 2022, 09:16:01 PM »
Cva and traditions are both made in Spain and by the same manufacturer. I’ve owned both and the both junk imo! Stick with American made. Might cost more but worth every penny!
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Offline WapitiTalk1

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Re: First Muzzeloader
« Reply #8 on: March 28, 2022, 09:27:09 PM »
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Offline Sneaky

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Re: First Muzzeloader
« Reply #9 on: March 28, 2022, 10:51:37 PM »
I bought my first muzzleloader last year, a CVA accura .50 cal. Was shocked how easy it was to get very accurate results with installation of a williams peep and front sight combo. Very simple and easy to use/clean the CVA rifles. I am not sure if they are the utmost quality in muzzleloading rifles, but they check all the boxes for me at a very reasonable price.

Offline pickardjw

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Re: First Muzzeloader
« Reply #10 on: March 29, 2022, 08:51:39 AM »
Cva and traditions are both made in Spain and by the same manufacturer. I’ve owned both and the both junk imo! Stick with American made. Might cost more but worth every penny!

Oof, yeah those Knight's are pricy. Are they the only American made option? And how does the bolt action compare to the break action in terms of cleaning?

Offline phildobaggins

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Re: First Muzzeloader
« Reply #11 on: March 29, 2022, 09:19:41 AM »
All these opinions are muddying the water even more I feel like  :chuckle:

Offline pickardjw

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Re: First Muzzeloader
« Reply #12 on: March 29, 2022, 09:59:20 AM »
All these opinions are muddying the water even more I feel like  :chuckle:

Just a bit  :chuckle:

A couple good reviews of the CVA's though, and one confirmation on the Traditions being garbage. The worst part is now I'm looking at $900 Knight muzzleloaders!

Offline carpsniperg2

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Re: First Muzzeloader
« Reply #13 on: March 29, 2022, 10:06:37 AM »
I have owened several brands over the years. CVA is has always been good. Traditions was garbage for me.

My backup gun is a cva accura. Solid gun. Best gun I have ever shot is the remignton 700 uml. I have been running one 3 years now. They are getting back into production. I have sold a bunch and other then recoil with the full load no complaints. Lots of guys shooting them 250/300 yards. I am running 150grains instead of 200 and I can shoot very well to 200 yards.

Knights shoot great from all I have been around. Only thing I don't like is the screw safety as I saw that cost a couple critters over the years.
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Offline Farmer72

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Re: First Muzzeloader
« Reply #14 on: March 29, 2022, 10:11:25 AM »
Try to find a used one if possible. I bought a Knight Disc Xtreme a few years ago used for $250 and I have never looked back. My dads Tradition he has is garbage. I hate the fact that there is no firing pin and there is just a tit on the plunger. The problem he always had was when you had to use caps the cap would fall off since there was nothing up against it. I didn't have the same issue once he switched to bare 209's for it. He now shoots a T/C encore with the muzzleloader barrel since he already had the frame and he just needed to buy the barrel.

 


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