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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Nov 2007
    Location
    Dundee
    Posts
    90

    Black powder pistol shooting

    Hi All,

    I have a few questions about black powder pistol shooting:

    1) What type/make of pistol do people usually start off with? Is there anything special I should get or avoid?

    2) I've been looking at the Euroarms Remington Model 1858 New Model Army Stainless in .44 in the Henry Krank catalogue. Should I go for .36 or .44 calibre? Would you recommend the Lothar Walther barrel option for instance?

    http://www.henrykrank.com/muzzle_loa...long_guns.html

    3) Do most people use black powder or black powder equivalents such as Hodgdon Triple 7 or Pyrodex?

    4) What are the benefits of using black powder equivalents is it not having to get the explosive license and RCA document, cost of the powder and less cleanup? Anything else?

    5) What's the cleaning procedure for cleaning a black powder pistol and what do you need for the cleaning?

    6) Are there any web sites where I can get further information on black powder pistol shooting?

    Cheers Craig

  2. #2
    Join Date
    May 2006
    Location
    Veliko Tarnovo, Bulgaria
    Posts
    3,222
    1, avoid the open framed colts or brass frames. Not favourite for target shooting.

    2, Excellent choice, as with any gun the price reflects how much better it should be. Stainless costs more but will stay good for longer. Most prefer a .44 but I have seen better accuracy with a .36, and bearing in mind we are target shooting this should be the logical choice. I guess some prefer the bigger bang/greater grin factor.

    3, Many turn their noses up at the alternatives because they insist on the spirit of the original. I'm a target shooter and choose the easy life so 777 for me.

    4, You hit the nail on the head as to why use alternatives except price tends to be higher especiailly 777 at around £35 a pot but it lasts ages so not really something to bother about.

    5, We all have our own cleanig regimes, one at my club using pyro just brushes and sprays with WD40, I have a scrub out with boiling water then spray but put extra effort into the nipple threads.

    6, AirgunBBS has some helpfull chaps in their muzzle loader section
    “If a cricketer, for instance, suddenly decided to go into a school and batter a lot of people to death with a cricket bat, which he could do very easily, I mean, are you going to ban cricket bats?” :- Prince Philip said after Dunblane

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Jun 2010
    Location
    Manchester
    Posts
    8,331
    Before you buy a pistol go to a club and try a few out and talk to the members. You will get a lot of good advice, and be wiser when you make your choice of pistol.

    Avoid flintlocks until you are experienced. They can be finnicky and need a lot of patience.
    Single shot pistols are quicker to load, and you can get in a rythm without having your concentration distracted, and they are easier to clean than a revolver.
    I would opt for the .44 calibre. It is used by a lot of people and they are accurate.
    Loading a revolver can be time consuming and fiddly, so if you do not have a lot of patience I would go for the single shot.
    As previously said, cleaning is a matter of choice. I clean mine with hot soapy water, dry it off, and then give it a coat of WD40.

    The type of powder you use is a matter of choice, but if you use a substitute to blackpowder the charge must be weighed, or a volume measure made to suit the powder you are using.
    Weight for weight, substitute powders give off MORE PRESSURE.

    Blackpowder is great fun, not as difficult as it sounds, and is VERY addictive.

    Good luck, I hope you have fun with your choice of pistol.

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Mar 2010
    Location
    Inverness, Highlands, God's own country.
    Posts
    10,067
    As above.
    I have 2 Uberti 1858 replicas in .44. I tend to use pyrodex and clean with Hot water, dry off (in bottom oven of AGA) and then oil with 3 in 1. The dishwasher is also very efficient in cleaning BP guns, subject to wife's approval of course.

    You also have all the fun of casting your own balls as things progress.
    Pistol & Rifle Shooting in the Highlands with Strathpeffer Rifle & Pistol Club. <StrathRPC at yahoo.com> or google it.
    No longer Pumpin Oil but still Passin Gas!

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Jul 2010
    Location
    Up Over Here
    Posts
    159
    i presonaly use tripple 7 powder, a lot cleaner for the gun and your chest as everyone in our club knows when im shooting for the night lol

    love the uberti remington .44 i got, very good guns

    also use wads not bore butter etc if you want to be shooting for longer as the greese etc collects and starts to make life difficalt, i shoot anywhere between 50 and 150 on a good night and my guns not stoped useing these methods

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Jul 2008
    Location
    Cardigan
    Posts
    49

    Blackpowder pistol shooting

    Hi Craig
    I use blackpowder in two flintlock pistols, a musket and a .451 Parkerhale volunteer rifle or as the boss (aka the wife) puts it ‘my cap gun’.
    my pistols are smooth bore – cheaper than rifled easier to load obviously less accurate but hugely enjoyable, yes I can spend time prating about with flints but sometimes I can get a run of twenty plus shots without a single flint problem. I need bp in the pan but have tried Pyrodex and 777 in the pistols and musket plus the clubs revolver.

    From this I would list the following:
    Pyrodex – expensive, corrosive more so than bp in flintlock cause a considerable delay between ignition in the pan and the main charge which is not good for the aim. Needs lots of washing out as it is still cruddy.

    777 – more expensive than Pyrodex but you down load as there is more pressure per grain, so it lasts longer. Burns bloody hot so breach really heats up with just one shot, which to be honest concerned me. The 777 doesn’t produce so much crud and it washes out with cold water, which also saves on buying bore scrubs etc.

    BP – cheaper unless you buy Swiss or high performance powders, all bp powders make a crud which has to be cleaned out however some powders make more than others. A brush out in shooting is sometimes required. Cleaning needs time, bore scrub compound washing up liquid and a lot of patches and changes of warm water, then gun oil when patch comes out clean.

    I tried revolvers and as enfielf2band said I didn’t like the faff of loading plus all the mess of the lube that with a lifelong interest in flintlocks made my mind up for me to go for flintlock pistols.

    I would make one final comment, if all our pistols etc are true replicas of the original items in bore size, dimension and rifling. Then the rifling’s twist was made for bp which will have less oomph than Pyrodex or 777 which means that the ball or bullet should be rotated correctly. I say this because one of our good pistol shoots at the club I frequent tried some of my bp in his Rugger and has changed over from Pyrodex to bp because it improved his shooting.

    Whichever way you go enjoy the shooting.

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