CCooper
WKR
I shot a buddy's bolt action (it's been awhile) that I believe used a primed 45 ACP case for the ignition with pyrodex pellets and sabbotted bullets. Recoil and muzzle blast were violent.
Yeah no they haven’t outlawed the bolt action primer module systems yet. As to AZ we’ve discussed and pondered it a bunch. AZ has always treated the early bull ML hunt as a top tier high demand hunt with very limited numbers of tags. The numbers of tags are low and always have been. They rotate units around so the ML’s don’t hurt the prime bull population too much in one area. Even if the kill percentage was 100% it’s a drop in the bucket compared to all the rest of the hunts. Based on that there’s no reason for AZ to get rid of the modern scoped long range ML. Lots of us have wanted them to but I’m doubting they will. That’s my current take but I could be wrong.Ok, I thought I read something about the systems that use the primers in the brass cartridge thing that load from the bolt.
I shoot 70 grains of BH209 in my TC Bone Collector with Barnes 290 gr sabots. MV about 1850 fps. I'm sure will kill anything out to 250 yds.One thing to note is that a lighter muzzleloader is not always better. Many of those will be used with smokeless powder or heavy BH209 loads pushing a 275gr bullet in the 2400 fps range. In a light rifle the recoil is going to be brutal, I know I don’t like shooting mine without the suppressor on it.
Those all load powder and bullets from the muzzle and only have a primer holder in the action itself. The Traditions Firestick and the 1859 sharps are the only ones I know of that load the powder from the rear.
I shoot 70 grains of BH209 in my TC Bone Collector with Barnes 290 gr sabots. MV about 1850 fps. I'm sure will kill anything out to 250 yds.
It would be for hunting Elk and Mulies. I have a T/C Bone Collector with a scope that's really accurate with BH209 over Barnes sabots, but I'd rather not take the scope off of it and put on peep sites. I'd rather have a dedicated muzzy with no optic.
That’s a brilliant ideaWhat about getting a pic rail with built in peep from Eabco and just remounting scope with return to zero rings. Would create some work to re zero but would have both options in future on same gun.
PeepRib Peep Sight for TC Encore and Omega by E. Arthur Brown Co.
127-812 peep sight and scope base in one piece for muzzleloaders. better focus and longer sight radius with optional scope mounting base. peeprib, encore peeprib, encore sight, prohunter sight, omega peeprib, peep for encore, rip for encore, tc sight system.eabco.com
I went this route on my CVA Optima and it’s pretty slick. The build quality is much better than the Williams set up I was running before as the set screws are better quality and don’t deform.What about getting a pic rail with built in peep from Eabco and just remounting scope with return to zero rings. Would create some work to re zero but would have both options in future on same gun.
PeepRib Peep Sight for TC Encore and Omega by E. Arthur Brown Co.
127-812 peep sight and scope base in one piece for muzzleloaders. better focus and longer sight radius with optional scope mounting base. peeprib, encore peeprib, encore sight, prohunter sight, omega peeprib, peep for encore, rip for encore, tc sight system.eabco.com
Thank you for replying. I'm sure your muzzles are amazing. Unfortunately, out of my price range.We have been building the “smokeless” style of muzzleloaders for years- mostly for Midwest whitetail hunters as they are legal in many of those states when a high powered rifle is not. We build on the arrowhead system as well, it has been the easiest, most efficient system we’ve seen so far.
Recently, due to the changes in NM (and to become CO legal) we have been developing blackhorn loads and open sites in the exact same guns and have been able to keep the same accuracy guarantees (1/2 MOA to 500 yards if we do the load development, with a scope)
The Gunwerks revic is a really neat system, but I think the issue is the shooters vision may end up being the limiting factor on a lot of the iron-type sights, not the actual site or it’s elevation changes.
Our western-style open site system should allow most shooters to accurately shoot 300 yards on elk-sized targets and that seems to be the limit of vision and ability for most shooters from what we’ve seen.
We have been building the “smokeless” style of muzzleloaders for years- mostly for Midwest whitetail hunters as they are legal in many of those states when a high powered rifle is not. We build on the arrowhead system as well, it has been the easiest, most efficient system we’ve seen so far.
Recently, due to the changes in NM (and to become CO legal) we have been developing blackhorn loads and open sites in the exact same guns and have been able to keep the same accuracy guarantees (1/2 MOA to 500 yards if we do the load development, with a scope)
The Gunwerks revic is a really neat system, but I think the issue is the shooters vision may end up being the limiting factor on a lot of the iron-type sights, not the actual site or it’s elevation changes.
Our western-style open site system should allow most shooters to accurately shoot 300 yards on elk-sized targets and that seems to be the limit of vision and ability for most shooters from what we’ve seen.
Our website only has what we call our “line series” guns; they’re built with custom-level performance guarantees at a discount, but you only have a few stock options to pick from. It allows us to reduce costs and lead times if you want that level of performance but don’t want to wait 12-18 months or spend 5-6k.Looking at your website
I don’t see a .50 cal option for Colorado?