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Thread: Flint and Ball

  1. #1
    Member Bavarian_Hunter's Avatar
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    Flint and Ball

    Maybe a decade ago I bought my first muzzleloader. At thr time I wanted a flintlock but was daunted by the learning curve so went to the other extreme and got an inline. It satisfied me for a while but eventually I moved to caplocks. I shot a few animals with my hawken before deciding I'd have to just bite the bullet and get a flintlock.

    It was certainly a learning curve but I haven't looked back, and do pretty well all my hunting with one now.

    My main gun is a custom 54 longrifle, running patched balls it does a great job on anything up to red stag size.

    I have a couple of smoothbores, my fusil de chasse 62 cal is my favourite gun and I've got it shooting well enough to take a deer at 50 yards but haven't done so yet.

    Sold a couple of caplocks to fund a custom build, due to be finished next year. It'll be an English styled hunting rifle I'm 58 cal. Slow twist to accommodate 0.570 round balls that weigh around 280gn. Should kill most things in the southern hemisphere pretty easily.

    I don't dress historically correct, but all my gear is. Adds to the flavour and enjoyment for me.

    50m shot, dropped on the spot to the 230gn roundball.
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    My kit.
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    Smoothbore hare.
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    Bryan, madjon_, 199p and 19 others like this.

  2. #2
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    Lot of fun shooting hares with a muzzle loader
    Boom, cough,cough,cough

  3. #3
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    Awesome!
    Bavarian_Hunter likes this.

  4. #4
    Member Micky Duck's Avatar
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    that looks like a hell of a lot of fun. thanks for shareing.
    Bavarian_Hunter likes this.
    75/15/10 black powder matters

  5. #5
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    I'm glad you're shooting .54 and .58 balls because that's good for deer and other game

    .45 and .50 balls are a lot lighter due to diameter and not really up to ethical hunting.

    My .72 percussion musket is my fun gun and everyone enjoys shooting it.

    But my Dickson 14 gauge belted ball double rifle is the next one to go shoot a deer.
    It would be on the west coast hunting right now if it wasn't for the gale norwester blowing and heavy rain over there
    The Church of
    John Browning
    of the Later-Day Shooter

  6. #6
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    I really admire guys who persevere with flint and master it
    I guess I'm just a bit too impatient and have so many guns I never really master any of them
    Micky Duck likes this.
    The Church of
    John Browning
    of the Later-Day Shooter

  7. #7
    Member Bavarian_Hunter's Avatar
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    @akaroa1 I've got some friends stateside that hunt whitetail regularly with a 45. I wouldn't hesitate to use it as a fallow gun personally, and may someday but I just prefer larger calibres.
    If anything I'd love a 40 for foxes and varmints someday.

    Do you have any pics of your 14? Sounds like a beauty. Good to see I'm not the only muzzleloader hunter left
    !

  8. #8
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    14 bore Dickson belted ball double rifle

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    And this is where the magic happens
    Belted ball rifling and very good bores for a pre 1850 BP rifle
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    The Church of
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  9. #9
    Member Marty Henry's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by akaroa1 View Post
    14 bore Dickson belted ball double rifle

    Attachment 237509

    And this is where the magic happens
    Belted ball rifling and very good bores for a pre 1850 BP rifle
    Attachment 237510
    You really do need to get a better camera you know they don't do justice to it.
    erniec and Micky Duck like this.

  10. #10
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    Quote Originally Posted by Marty Henry View Post
    You really do need to get a better camera you know they don't do justice to it.
    Yeh vintage mobile phone
    Vintage rifles

    Bit of a theme

    Yes I really do need a better phone / camera but always another rifle to spend money on
    The Church of
    John Browning
    of the Later-Day Shooter

  11. #11
    Member Bavarian_Hunter's Avatar
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    @akaroa1 I've never seen a belted ball gun, I suppose it works on the same concept as a whitworth rifle. How is it accuracy wise?

  12. #12
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    Stuff the photos
    U need to visit @akaroa to appreciate what he has
    Micky Duck likes this.

  13. #13
    Member Marty Henry's Avatar
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    In akaroas absence as I understand it, the projectile is sort of the same as whitworths in having the rifling already on it but I doubt that it influenced whitworth. It was an attempt to make a military rifle cheaper, quicker and easier to load than the Baker. Brunswick's were all percussion whereas the baker was flint. The belted ball reduced loading resistance but meant cartridges couldn't be used as the belt has to be aligned with the grooves to load the ball after the powder had been charged, however the military ones were the same bore diameter as the service musket so at a pinch that ammunition could be used. Accuracy was similar to the Brunswick's at realistic ranges but the rate of fire higher. Other systems were trialled such as oval bore which had some success later with mine and pritchett style bullets.
    Akaroas double switch barrel one is the first commercial one I've seen and next time I'm there I want a go with it please😁

  14. #14
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    Looks like this

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    The Church of
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    of the Later-Day Shooter

  15. #15
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    Quote Originally Posted by akaroa1 View Post
    Looks like this

    Attachment 237560
    Belted balls were a very early type of mechanically engaged rifling

    The service rifle type was called Brunswick Rifling
    It's circa 1840-50

    Accuracy is ok for what it is and its age

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    Bavarian_Hunter likes this.
    The Church of
    John Browning
    of the Later-Day Shooter

 

 

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