ElDiablito
WKR
- Joined
- Mar 2, 2022
- Messages
- 946
Yeah, with all of the QC complaints on the CVAs, no way I’d consider any of them. Let us know how it goes for you.
I don't see where anyone ridiculed him. Other than one guy who suggested a CVA accura, everyone else seems to agree. The CVA wolf is a cheap gun. It performs fine for the price point, nobody should expect them to be great, but they go bang, and with the right load should be fine for most people. That's fine.Poor fellar comes here for suggestions and opinions. Gets same on both sides in spades. Makes his decision and gets ridiculed.
It’s a dog gone muzzle loader not a work of art. If you can’t stalk within accurate range of your ML then rifle hunt. OP you will do fine with any modern ML unless you do a lot of long range squirrel hunt’n. Go out and have fun.
What kind of peep sight setup is that ypu haveWestern Ulite - awesome rifle
Or even the newer DISC
A side note if it fits within your budget I would really suggest you get a black Nitride model.
For $200 the Knight Vision is hard to beat (in my opinion). I haven't shot other muzzleloaders, and am sure some have nicer triggers, sights that fit easier, etc. But my vision worked great for me all year and ultimately took a deer last week at 160 yards.
I put a williams peep and globe on it (almost as expensive as the original purchase). This winter I plan to mess with the stock a bit and try to make the grip a bit more vertical and maybe give it a paint job. Otherwise I'm pretty satisfied with it. My only complaint is the ramrod it comes with kinda sucks. You can see I got it stuck in the barrel while trying to swab between shots (it only sticks out about 2" and that wasn't enough for me to pull it back through the fouling).
Knight is a fine rifle , the 50 caliber is a 1 in 28 twist. If you purchase it you will need to replace the ignition system. CVA Paramount comes with a 1 in 22 twist in a 50 caliber. So now you may ask what’s the advantage. Faster twist helps stabilize heavier bullets. If price is a issue then go with a Accura LRX in 45 . It has a fast twist barrel and will allow you to shoot bore size bullets.I am looking to purchase my first muzzleloader for hunting elk in Washington and was hoping to find people with experience using a Knight vs a CVA. I am new to the game and know very little about muzzleloaders. A friend of mine suggested I purchase the Knight Ultra Lite in 50 cal online. I went to a Muzzleloader store near me in hopes of actually getting to put my hands on one and found they don't carry any. The owner of the shop and long time muzzleloader hunter said that Knight's are pretty much obsolete and that they haven't made anything new in the last 4 to 5 years. He showed me the CVA's and I was kind of leaning towards the MRX but am unsure, especially with the collapsible ramrod. Not sure if that is a big deal having to carry it on you as opposed to it being attached to the rifle, as well as having to buy an extra to use for cleaning. I have tried to do some research and comparisons on both but am finding conflicting info such as quality issues with CVA. I would really like to hear recommendations from people who have had experience using the Knight and or CVA. Thanks in advance for the help.
Knight is a fine rifle , the 50 caliber is a 1 in 28 twist. If you purchase it you will need to replace the ignition system.
The owner of the shop and long time muzzleloader hunter said that Knight's are pretty much obsolete and that they haven't made anything new in the last 4 to 5 years. He showed me the CVA's...
Wow, awesome. Dumb question, but do you slug the barrels as with cast bullets, to get a proper diameter ball (e.g., my 45-70 slugs to .458", I cast to .461," and size to .460")?That's a 58 caliber lefthand Hawken with an old GRRW barrel on it. Shoots very well with 105 grains of Swiss ffg, hornady .570 balls, .015 patch, felt wad over the powder.