bladeracer wrote:The "new" blackpowder forum gave me a hankering to get dirty.
Got lots of family here for a couple weeks so I couldn't get in as deep as I would have liked, but I managed 19 shots ]
LawrenceA wrote:Your Hawken.
What breed is it?
Looks even short by Hawken standards.
Oldbloke wrote:bladeracer wrote:The "new" blackpowder forum gave me a hankering to get dirty.
Got lots of family here for a couple weeks so I couldn't get in as deep as I would have liked, but I managed 19 shots ]
Dirty old man.
on_one_wheel wrote:What's your twist ?
Mine is 1 in 48 and the black powder specialist who sold it to me told me to use balls only, he said it wouldn't shoot minnies yet I'm reading loads of posts on the bet from people who've shot them quite successfully from the same type of rifles.
Many claim that using wads help.
I've cast a heap of R.E.A.L bullets ... can't wait to try them. I'll probably do it tomorrow.
on_one_wheel wrote:What's your twist ?
Mine is 1 in 48 and the black powder specialist who sold it to me told me to use balls only, he said it wouldn't shoot minnies yet I'm reading loads of posts on the bet from people who've shot them quite successfully from the same type of rifles.
Many claim that using wads help.
I've cast a heap of R.E.A.L bullets ... can't wait to try them. I'll probably do it tomorrow.
CRF wrote:I run a spit patch then a dry patch every few shots at the range. Prevents a big build up and caking of the powder so clean up at the end of the day seems much easier.
No offence intended toward your rifle but hawken is becoming a very loose term these days.
bladeracer wrote:CRF wrote:I run a spit patch then a dry patch every few shots at the range. Prevents a big build up and caking of the powder so clean up at the end of the day seems much easier.
No offence intended toward your rifle but hawken is becoming a very loose term these days.
Do they shoot differently though?
True, though mine is nearly fifty years old
CRF wrote:bladeracer wrote:Do they shoot differently though?
Like any gun I guess, depends on what it likes.
No1Mk3 wrote:...it is a genuine Hawkins Rifle, Tony Hawkins made it!
Noisydad wrote:Try a wet patch lube brew. I can shoot my .54 CVA all day without cleaning by using a wet lube. It also doubles as a cleaning solvent. It’s made from 420 ml water, 30 ml liquid soap (wool wash is good), 60 ml soluble cutting oil.
Soak the patches and lightly squeeze them out. Use them nearly dripping wet. Each re load wipes the bore and you can shoot all day.
I also use this brew as bore cleaner for no cartridge rifles too.
bladeracer wrote:Noisydad wrote:Try a wet patch lube brew. I can shoot my .54 CVA all day without cleaning by using a wet lube. It also doubles as a cleaning solvent. It’s made from 420 ml water, 30 ml liquid soap (wool wash is good), 60 ml soluble cutting oil.
Soak the patches and lightly squeeze them out. Use them nearly dripping wet. Each re load wipes the bore and you can shoot all day.
I also use this brew as bore cleaner for no cartridge rifles too.
It doesn't affect the powder at all?
dnedative wrote:bladeracer wrote:Noisydad wrote:Try a wet patch lube brew. I can shoot my .54 CVA all day without cleaning by using a wet lube. It also doubles as a cleaning solvent. It’s made from 420 ml water, 30 ml liquid soap (wool wash is good), 60 ml soluble cutting oil.
Soak the patches and lightly squeeze them out. Use them nearly dripping wet. Each re load wipes the bore and you can shoot all day.
I also use this brew as bore cleaner for no cartridge rifles too.
It doesn't affect the powder at all?
No, not really, well it might affect a few grains on the top of the charge but they will still get burnt off
Shooting well lubed patches is the go, dry and spit patches in my brown bess are good for about 5 shots and then it starts to become a chore to get a ball seated. Run a well lubed wet patch and they go down nicely, I dont think it fowls any less though. Same with my percussion rifles.
I would try a few with lightly soaked in olive oil first, see how they go.
LawrenceA wrote:Wet patches are OK at the range as there is no time for the lube to really contaminate the powder.
Not so good for hunting.
But unlikely to get 20 shots off hunting