Is the hang fires happening after cleaning at the range?
Yes. I clean all my blackpowder firearms obnoxiously thoroughly. Drill bit through the flash channel, torch tip cleaner through the flash hole, and clean the bore after every round. The batch of BH209 I got still misfired, repeatedly, about once every five rounds.
The advantages to BH209 are that it is less hygoroscopic (absorbs less water from the air) and cleaner than any other blackpowder substitute. The downside is inescapable for me, though- it is harder to ignite, and therefore, in my experience, less reliable in a hunting situation. No matter how good all the other attributes of a propellant/ projectile/firearm may be, I'd never hunt with anything other than the least likely thing to malfunction when I'm aiming at a game animal.
It’s not hard to reliably ignite if the proper primer is used.
Correct primer, loading procedures and breech plug used. I'll be happy to provide video and pictures of Blackhorn failing with the aforementioned setup for anyone interested.
My intent here is not to bash a product. It's simply to make people aware of a weakness that could cause an animal to be wounded or cost someone an experience of a lifetime.
CCI shotshell primers were the ones I used. Again, it could just be that I got a bad batch of powder- I probably would have picked up another bottle of powder to try if Western Powders' customer service hadn't been so rude and dismissive. In any case, glad you've found what works for you!
Was using magnums when I experienced the failures.
Still could have been bad primers.
Correct primer, loading procedures and breech plug used. I'll be happy to provide video and pictures of Blackhorn failing with the aforementioned setup for anyone interested.
My intent here is not to bash a product. It's simply to make people aware of a weakness that could cause an animal to be wounded or cost someone an experience of a lifetime.
After you clean it, fire a primer with no load to blow the oil/cleaner out of the primer channel. See if that helps.
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I have this too. Still had issues with ignition. Drilled out the flash channel wider which helps. When I'm at the range, I only clean with patches and no solvent. I also fire a primer between shots as the flash channel gets dirty even w/o using any solvent or lube.I am using the Traditions Pursuit breech plug. To my knowledge this is the only 209 plug they offer.
I've been having the same issues as Tag_Soup. Tried BH209 for the first time the other week and frequent hang fires and two misfires in 15 shots.
Tag_Soup - I think I have a similar issue with the poorly sealed primer. How did you shim the backplate forward?
My setup is a little different, but looking for anything to try - I used the recommened oil-based cleaning products, so don't think that would be the issue.
I was running a Traditions Buckstalker with 80grains of BH209, the black crush rib sabots with XTP .45cal bullets, and CCI magnum primers. To start the day, I did a couple swabs with dry patches (both sides), fired two primers, then loaded 80 grains of BH 209. I seated the bullet to the same depth I use with 777. I also cleaned every 3rd shot with a very slightly damp patch (just licked the patch lightly) followed by 2x dry patches. Every cleaning, I also used a nipple pick and one of those fire channel brushes on the breech plug. AND I actually bought the A1443 Traditions breech plug, only for it to arrive and me to realize it was exactly the same as the stock breech plug!
Any advice or help would be greatly appreciated! Hoping to see some of the consistency and cleanliness benefits BigGameHunter saw in his tests.