Ucsdryder
WKR
- Joined
- Jan 24, 2015
- Messages
- 6,672
My dad hunted on a muzzle loader tag this year. We dumped the powder at the end of every day and fired a primer through it reloaded each morning. The barrel was then taped. Is this overboard?
My dad hunted on a muzzle loader tag this year. We dumped the powder at the end of every day and fired a primer through it reloaded each morning. The barrel was then taped. Is this overboard?
If you use Blackhorn 209 you need to unload every day. I learned the hard way this morning, which is the second time in two years the hard way has reared its head. It can’t just be a coincidence.......
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
My opinion is that if it misfired there was a reason and that reason is most likely moisture. If you load your gun and it is dry the entire hunt then a misfire on day 5 would have happened on day 1. I have gone a week or more from season opening to season close. I have always just shot my gun at the end and it has always gone off. If I suspected any moisture got in the chamber I would reload. That said the last 2 years in CO it has rained and I experienced heavy condensation in my tent. My gun still fired at the end of the season.
Mine is typically loaded until I shoot at an animal......or fire it at the end of the season.
Biggest thing I preached was why not? Takes 3 minutes. I had a LOT on the line to have $.04 in powder or primer fail me
I generally load mine november 15th for the Michigan gun opener and generally don’t unload it until Jan 1. Most everyone I know does the same. Keep it in the truck all season or at least the garage to not cause moisture buildup with temp change.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Same here.
I'd be interested in the type of muzzleloader, projectile, and primer before trying to diagnose the cause of the misfires. My mis-fires and hang fires have been caused by either a loose fitting projectile or fouled flame channel.