Wednesday, December 21, 2011

Bloodied the muzzleloader

Had a pretty good deer season this fall. Got two does during the rifle season, and shot this little button buck Sunday night, two days before the muzzleloading season ended.

Son of Moby

Searched for Moby Buck all season long, but he never did put in an appearance. Hopefully next year.

Also want to thank everyone for the card and house plant for Wendy's recovery from hip surgery. It really helped perk up her spirits as we made our way through the fall. Hopefully you'll see more of us this coming season than you did in 2011.

Anyway, happy holidays to you all and Merry Christmas!

Jim

Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Commander's Shoot


Oops, forgot Mikey was in only one of the photos, and in my rush to get something up, posted the wrong photo. Here is the complete team from last weekend.

Sunday, October 23, 2011

Commander's Skirmish, Saratoga NY 10/22-10/23 2011. Back-row left to right: Al O, Mike, Denise, John K., Timmy, Jon F, Tommy. Front row: Walt and Al T.

Saturday, October 15, 2011

124th Nationals Oct 10,2011

Left to Right: Back Row- Dave, Tommy, Rich, Carter, Walt, Denise, Jon
Middle Row- Al O, Bernie
Front Row- Timmy, Al T, Mikey, Erin

4th Va. B Team Smoothbore 25 yard tiles, 124 Nationals

25 yard tiles, Smoothbore B team, 124th Nationals, video by Rich Comeau

Sunday, September 18, 2011

Hopkinton Regional

Hopkinton Regional 9/18/2011
Left to Right, Back Row: Jon, John, Bob, Timmey, Walt, Tommy, Fred
Front Row: Al T, Al P, Richie, Al O, Denise


Saturday, July 30, 2011

Saratoga results

Musket

15 CVI 734.8
73 NY 838.6
120 NY 958.3
42 NY 964.8
4 Va Inf A 989.1
Carolina 1099.1
10 Mass Btty 1120.5
20 CVI 1219.3
14 CVI 1345.2
4 Va Inf B 1540.5

Carbine

15 CVi 704.2
4 Va Inf A ` 833.5
[Carolina 901.1]
120 NY 933.0
10 Mass Btty 933.4
73 NY 1023.2
[42 1047.8]
14 CVI 1146.3
4 Va Inf B 1759.9

Smoothbore
10 Mass Btty 242.2
4 Va Inf A 274.2
Carolina B 330.5
15 CVI A 372.1
14 CVI A 374.3
120 NY 417.0
15 CVI B 467.0
14 CVI B 515.1
4 Va Inf B 634.4
20 CVI 830.0

Musket
50
P Barbieri 49
T Trovato 46
G Rohde 44-1
H Anagnostis 44
M Farrell 44

100
P Barbieri 46-1
W Clark 46
H Anagnostis 44
P Hughes 44
G Rohde 42

Agg
P Barbieri 95-1
W Clark 90
H Anagnostis 88
P Hughes 87
G Rohde 86-1

Carbine
50
M Romano 47
A Torday 45
T Trovato 44
M Aluzzo 43-1
T Hines 42

100
J Turner 44-1
W Clark 44
T Hines 42
G Rohde 40
P Hughes 38

Agg
W Clark 85
G Rohde 79
P Hughes 78
T Occhi 77
J Faucher 68

Rev

H Anagnostis 48-2
M Aluzzo 41-1
W Clark 37-1

BL
50
W Clark 48-1
G Rohde 46-2
T Occhi 41

100
W Clark 46-1
G Rohde 45
T Occhi 40

Agg
W Clark 94-2
G Rohde 91-2
T Occhi 81

SB
25
T Hines 47
C Hughes 46-1
M Aluzzo 46

50
A Torday 46
T Occhi 45
W Clark 40

Agg
A Torday 89
C Hughes 86-1
T Occhi 86

Grand Agg
W Clark 212-1
H Anagnostis 130-2

Wednesday, July 13, 2011

Glastonbury results

Another regional skirmish completed this weekend hosted by the 1st CVI. Although there was some rain Friday night, Sat & Sun were clear, dry and sunny. While the 15th CVI started out the musket team match with a commanding lead, the 5th CVI narrowed it down to 8.9 seconds.

BB gun competition was also held with the following medal winners:
Michael Clark, 4th Va Inf 82
Cody Vervalin, 14th Va Cav 42-1x

Individual medal leaders were: Walter Clark - 11, Dan Stedman - 7, Ted Occhi - 7.

Also attached as a separate file are the Regional team results after 4 skirmishes. While the number of shooters has remained approximately the same as the past several years, we now have more legal teams competing.

NEXT SKIRMISH: July 22-23, at Saratoga hosted by the 14th VA Cav,

MUSKET TEAM RESULTS (4 events):

15th CVI 646.4
5th CVI 655.3
14th VA Cav 761.4
4th VA I "A" 837.9
14th CVI "A" 864.9
34th VA Cav 872.8
14th CVI "B" 930.3
20th CVI 1,029.8
4th VA I "B" 1,103.1
10th Mass 1,309.3

CARBINE TEAM RESULTS (4 events, the stake was disregarded since nobody finished in the time allotted):

15th CVI 510.3
34th VA Cav 553.0
4th VA I "A" 585.5
14th VA Cav 627.0
10th Mass 654.5
13th NJ 730.5
14th CVI 778.3
5th CVI 1,065.0
4th VA I "B" 1,119.6


SMOOTHBORE TEAM RESULTS (4 events, including a puff board):

4th VA I "A" 334.3
15th CVI "A" 366.0
10th Mass 389.0
34th VA Cav 460.0
5th CVI 574.6
14th VA Cav 606.2
15th CVI "B" 613.3
14th CVI 756.0

INDIVIDUAL RESULTS:

MUSKET-50 Yrds "A"
W Clark 44-1x
J Moore 44
T Trovato 44

MUSKET-100 Yrds "A"
W Clark 45
D Stedman 45

MUSKET AGG-"A"
W Clark 89-1x
D Stedman 88-1x

MUSKET-50 Yrds "B"
R Burres 44-2x
J Faucher 44
A Torday 42

MUSKET-100 Yrds "B"
J Faucher 41
T Schott 41
T Occhi 39

MUSKET AGG-"B"
J Faucher 85
T Schott 82
T Occhi 78

CARBINE-50 Yrds "A"
D Stedman 46
T Hines 44-1x
M Koprowski 43

CARBINE-100 Yrds "A"
W Clark 44
D Stedman 43-1x
R Breidenthal 41

CARBINE Agg "A"
D Stedman 89-1x
W Clark 87
R Breidenthal 82

CARBINE-50 Yrds "B"
M Lathem 44
P Orzolek 43
R Raby 43

CARBINE-100 Yrds "B"
T Schott 39
J Faucher 37
P Orzolek 35

CARBINE AGG "B"
J Faucher 79
T Witham 68
T Schott 39

REVOLVER 25 Yrd
D Stedman 47-2x
P Orzolek 44
E Moore 44

SMOOTHBORE 25 Yrd
T Occhi 45
S Smith 43-1x
T Witham 43-1x

SMOOTHBORE 50 Yrd
T Hines 43
A Torday 40
W Clark 40

SMOOTHBORE Agg
T Witham 83-1x
W Clark 82-1x
T Occhi 82

BREECHLOADER-50 Yrds
W Clark 46
P Orzolek 39
T Occhi 39

BL-100yrd
T Hines 46
T Occhi 45
W Clark 44

BL-Agg
W Clark 90
T Occhi 84

GRAND AGGREGATE
D Stedman 224-4x
W Clark 219-1x
R Breidenthal 194-1x

Monday, July 11, 2011

4th VA Inf battle flag - The real one



4th VA Inf. Battle flag - Captured May 12, 1864 at Spotsylvania - Bloody Angle

Picture taken at the Confederate Museum, Richmond, VA by Dave Wright

Wife's photography class

My wife is taking a photography class at RISD, had to do portraits for this weeks assignment. She ended up not using any of the civil war ones, lol, but it allowed her to experiment with the cameras settings.

Monday, July 4, 2011

Parker Hale 2-bander question

Hi everyone,
I think I already know the answer to this question, but thought I'd also get some opinions from you all.

I'm trying to tweak the 100 yard accuracy with my Parker Hale 2-bander, and so I'm thinking of moving to a heavier bullet. This would mean going from my current Lyman 575213 minie (510 gr minie, which shoots pretty well in the gun already) to a heavier Parker Hale style Minie (560 gr). I'm hoping the extra mass in the PH style minie and a bit more powder will help tighten the groups a bit more, particularly at 100 yds.

I have been sitting on the Parker Hale mold that came with the gun and tried casting with it today for the first time. The minies out of this Parker Hale mold are only about .573 in diameter, whereas ordinarily I size the Lyman 575213 rounds to .576".

Do you think the Parker Hale minie going to be too undersized for what I want it to do? Should I just get the Lyman 575213PH mold and size to .576 for a tighter fit in the bore?

For what it's worth, the Parker Hale mold threw bullets today in the 547-550 grain range, whereas the Lyman 575213PH is listed as a 566 grain minie.

I did manage to get to the range tonight before dark and shot four groups of five at 100 yds (well, actually 96 yards since our frames got moved in a bit). Groups were okay, nothing to brag about, but I was shooting off cheap bags rather than my good rest. Started with 45 gr of 3F, groups were a tad high, might drop the powder a bit and move back to a portable bench at a genuine 100 yds. I'd say the groups averaged about 5" without much effort on my part.

What I'm hoping is that heavier minies will tighten the groups at 100 yds, especially given the relatively fast 1:48 twist in the P58 rifling. other thoughts?

So even though I'm pretty sure I'm going to need the Lyman mold, I just wanted to see what folks here thought about the sizing issue before spending the cash.

thanks everyone,
Jim

ps. I also don't want to grind down the base plug on my 575213 mold, would rather keep that intact in case I want to go back to it later.

Sunday, July 3, 2011

4th Virginia Sutler's token

my thanks to Billy "O'Malley" Lo Meli for turning this one up on the Facebook. Don Troiani has this posted on his artist Facebook page. Pretty cool stuff.

Tommy, I think you need one of these . . .

Monday, June 27, 2011

Saratoga Results

Another great regional completed this weekend with thanks to the 120th NYVI as hosts. The weather was just about perfect with a clear, sunny sky and cool nights.
The musket matches were 8-shooter teams with 5 competing and 2 hospital teams. The 14th VA cav took the lead from the first event and completly dominated the results. Individual match leaders were Harry A - 8 medals, Glen Rohde - 7, D Smith - 6.
NEXT SHOOT- July 9-10, Glastonbury Elks, Hosted by 1st CVI
MUSKET TEAM RESULTS:
14th VA Cav 658.1
15th CVI 890.3
4th VA Inf 923.8
10th Mass 962.0
73rd NYVI 976.4
Hosp-A 1,214.6
Hosp-B 1,524.1
CARBINE TEAM RESULTS:
15th CVI 473.3
14th VA Cav A 509.1
10th Mass A 726.1
4th VA Inf A 1,052.7
73rd NYVI 1,053.6
4th VA Inf B 1,114.1
14th VA B 1,178.9
10th Mass B 1,624.0
SMOOTHBORE TEAM RESULTS
10th Mass A 227.0
15th CVI A 233.5
14th VA B 354.2
4th VA Inf A 400.8
14th CVI 441.7
10th Mass B 483.3
14th VA Cav A 487.1
15th CVI B 605.0
INDIVIDUAL RESULTS
MUSKET-50 Yrd
H Anagnostis 49-2x
D Stedman 47-1x
T Trovato 47
P Barbieri 46
D Smith 46
MUSKET-100 Yrd
P Barbieri 46-1x
G Rhode 45-1x
H Anagnostis 44-1x
M Farrell 44
M Jewett 43-1x
MUSKET AGG
H Anagnostis 93-3x
P Barbieri 92-1x
D Stedman 89-1x
CARBINE-50 Yrd
H Anagnostis 48
D Smith 46
S Tackus 44-2x
G Rohde 44-1x
M Farrell 44-1x
CARBINE-100 Yrd
H Anagnostis 46-1x
D Stedman 45-1x
T Hines 45
D Smith 44
G Rohde 42
CARBINE AGG
H Anagnostis 94-1x
D Smith 90
G Rhode 86-1x
REVOLVER-25 Yrd
H Anagnostis 48
P Orzolek 44
A La Patra 42
BREECHLOADER-50 Yrd
C Henshall 46
G Rohde 46
P Barbieri 45-1x
BREECHLOADER -100 Yrd
G Rohde 49-1x
A La Patra 44
D Smith 42
BREECHLOADER-Agg
G Rohde 95-1x
A La Patra 88-1x
D Smith 86
SMOOTHBORE-25 Yrd
M Ross 48
T Witham 47-3x
D Nelson 45-1x
SMOOTHBORE - 50 yrd
J Jewett 46
A Torday 42
T Hines 39
SMOOTHBORE AGG
J Jewett 89
A Torday 84
T Hines 80
GRAND AGGREGATE
H Anagnostis 235-4x
D Stedman 213-2x
A La Patra 200

Thursday, June 23, 2011

Aging eyes: ongoing

After falling apart during the styrofoam cups event on Sunday morning (zero for . . . [cough] nine), I decided to make haste to my optician for some vision expertise. I can tell you that everything was a blur during that event--and I do mean EVERYTHING, targets, front sight, rear sight, everything. What concerned me most was the apparent double vision I had of the targets themselves . . . I couldn't blink them straight, I couldn't line up the front sight on a single isolated cup, nothing. That's never happened to me before. So off I went.

The optician I go to is a good one, and he's got several other customers who shoot. Half the problem he suggested was not having the right color shooting glasses to make the targets pop out of the green background a bit more. That made sense to me, so we talked about shooting glasses. We also talked about the need to focus on the front sight with my dominant (right eye). Ordinarily I've been shooting with bifocal contact lenses and clear non-prescription shooting glasses.

He suggested dropping down a diopter in my right contact lens and wearing a non-bifocal lens in that eye. He predicted that would give me good focus on the front sight at around 30 inches or thereabouts. So he gave me a couple of -3.75 lenses to try (my normal prescription is -4.75) in the right eye, with the instructions to keep my normal bifocal -4.75 in the left eye.

And I bought a pair of Bolle sport glasses with 4 different colored lens inserts: yellow, light brown, vermillion, and a polarized set for driving. These are polycarbonate so should work for shooting; he also sells the Wiley X brand but did not have any in stock, so I went with the Bolle. The idea here is to see if I can get the target image as sharp as possible against the various backgrounds and in different light conditions.

Went to the range yesterday morning before the rains came--put in the weaker contact lens in my right eye, wore the yellow lenses (cloudy conditions) in the shooting glasses, and shot 20 or so rounds at paper.

Results were encouraging: My first target put three just outside the black in one big hole; the second five shots were kind of all over; and the last ten shots put a number in the black.

Then I shot a half dozen or so shots plinking at blocks of wood against the backstop. This was the best thing I did: I probably hit 2 out of 3 shots on average for about ten shots total.

So hopefully this will be the next step in trying to figure out how to improve my musket shooting with aging eyes. The rains came a bit too quickly yesterday to shoot anymore at clays, but I'm going to make up some hanging clays to try with the vermilion lenses, which I understand really accentuate the orange. I'll let you know how that goes.
you can't hit what you can't see . . .

Tuesday, June 7, 2011

Denise Mike Fred and Bernie

Team photo taken by Mike Clark



Bernie and Fred





Al, Bob, Rich, Walt, Mikey







More Glastonbury pics

Walt, Bob, Tom, Denise, and Rich

Al, Bernie, Mike, and Tom



Bob, Denise, Mike, Fred, Bernie





Rick Bob Denise and Walt







Bob, Denise, Walt, Mike, Fred and Bernie









Glastonbury Shoot

Al, Denise, Fred, Tom, Jon, Mike, Bernie, Bob, Rich, and Walt.

Monday, June 6, 2011

Glastonbury Shoot

I have pics to upload, but I'm getting an internal error. Any suggestions?

Jon asks Tommy how much he wants for that Maynard

Saturday, May 14, 2011

If anyone is interested...Walt is selling his Mississippi Type E, with SAC card, bayonnette, scabbard and frog. Will be taking to Nationals on Monday.

Wednesday, May 11, 2011

Black Powder

I'll admit, I'm a little slow on the uptake sometimes. I ran out of 2F just before Hopkinton, and switched brands (the one shop in RI no longer carried Schuetzen) I expected a little change in point of aim, but as luck would have it I ended up 7 inches higher at 50 yards. Struggled through the weekend with an awful, hard to replicate sight picture at 50 with the carbine. I have been making plans to put a higher front sight on and sight in the carbine again, when something Tom said finally sunk in. I can just buy more Schuetzen in Winchester and leave the carbine alone. This solution is so simple, but flies in the face of my constant tinkering.

Friday, April 1, 2011

Recruitment Skirmish


Come on boys, if you want a heap of fun and to kill some yankees, er, I mean, clay pigeons, pots or tiles.

Design by Kim Faucher


Click on picture to see small print. If you can read the fine print w/out clicking on it, sign on the dotted line!

Tuesday, March 22, 2011

Tiverton Shoot

Too busy shooting to take pictures (OK, I forgot). 4th Virginia had a strong showing at the Rhode Island blackpowder shoot. On Saturday, Winchester, Timmy, Freddie, Al Otash, Tom, and Tony enjoyed the mild weather, and on Sunday Bob, Al Pacheco, Tom, Tony and myself enjoyed the sunshine. Tom won the 25 yard smoothbore with a score of 46, and the 4th Va. swept the 50 yard military musket, taking 1st 2nd and 3rd place, with a top score of 44 1x.

One question......Why did Timmy name his dog after Phil Sheridan's horse?

Wednesday, March 9, 2011

Range report, the good, the bad and the ugly

Took advantage of decent weather yesterday to try out the Hoyt reline springfield and the Sharps carbine. Without touching the 1861 sights from before the reline, shooting a benchrest 3" 10 shot string about 2" rt of center, elevation good. Had a little difficulty loading the latter rounds, probably a combination of 6 month old ammo (Walt's recipe lube) and 45 F ambient temp (thoughts?). Shots made two ragged holes between the 10 shots.
Sharps carbine functioned properly, 25 shots w/o any noticable increase in effort operating the block. 4" 10 shot group, from benchrest, could probably have shot better, was trying to get a feel for the carbine. Blazing fast to reload, which is kind of a bad thing because the ammo required multiple steps to manufacture. Need to move the rear sight for windage, but the elevation for 50 yards with the sight flipped up and the bar at the bottom is right on. Pays to be Irish around St. Paddy's Day.
Went back to the range this morning with the Winter project 1863, new Whitacre barrel. Group size very similar to the 1861, though there was some wind this morning, and it was 10 F cooler. Similar problems loading, I'm pretty sure its the temp causing the problem. Shooting 4" rt, not bad considering I just lightly staked the new front sight and took it to the range. Also shooting 3" low , center hold. I've already done the math and adjusted the windage, going to wait till next session to do any filing on the front sight.
I need to do some casting, still need to test out the Hoyt Smith carbine reline and make a few rounds for Tiverton. Hope to spend the rest of March casting bullets.
JF

Oh yeah, most important.....40 rounds musket and 25 rounds carbine NO KEYHOLES!

Saturday, February 19, 2011

1863 Springfield Type 2


Preview of my winter project, almost completed. 1863 Type 2, all original parts except for the bridle, tumbler, and Whitacre barel with sights. I cheated and found an original stock that was a bit beat up, so I didn't have to do that much inletting, and only needed a little bit of epoxy bedding. Just need to tune the lock a bit, glassbed the lock, clean up and seal the wood, and make some minor modifications to 2 of the band springs. Hope to have it completed by the team meeting. Am going to put this head to head with the newly relined Providence Tool 1861.

1859 Armi Sport Sharps- mod for skirmish






















Finally home, opened up the Sharps sent by Charlie Hahn. The following pictures show the details of the modification. The breech block was made solid (gas check plate is pinned in place) and the flash channel was simplified. The chamber sleeve was remanufactured in two pieces, with a captured o-ring used to make a positive seal with the breech block. He also made a taller brass front sight. Mr. Hahn provided info about care and feeding, as well as instructions for making the cardboard cartridges. This mild weather returns, and I should be able to post a range report. Still waiting on the Smith carbine sent for reline, should be any day.

Friday, February 18, 2011

1859 Sharps

My wife tells me that my Sharps has come back from the gunsmith. I've been stuck at work for 62 hours now, will be home in the morning to examine it and post some pics.
Jon

Wednesday, February 16, 2011

Caldwell Rock front rest on sale at Cabelas

Just ran across this sale, the Caldwell Rock BR 1000 is on sale at Cabelas for $89. Normally this lists for $199 and tends to sell online for $160-170, so this is a good deal. Here's the info:



Caldwell® Rock BR™ 1000 Shooting Rest
  • Magnum size for heavy rifles and extreme-distance shooting
  • Massive, 24-lb. frame supported by a wide 18" footprint
  • Precision, ball-bearing elevation system
  • Includes two forend bags
Unleash the full potential of your rifle and ammunition. The the magnum-sized BR 1000 is extra wide and heavy, perfect for taming hard-hitting long-range rifles. With features like a fine-adjustment ball-bearing elevation system, windage-adjustable cradle and customizable bag tensioning, it's built to meet the high expectations of competitive bench-rest shooters. The two-stage elevation adjustment reaches up to 11-1/2". It includes a 3" three-lobe bag and a 5" three-lobe bag. Stable, recoil-soaking 18" cast-iron footprint. Long-life stainless steel components. Accepts any of the Caldwell Deluxe front rest bags.
Weight: 24 lbs.
This would probably make a pretty decent front rest for muzzleloaders, combined with a rear bag would be a nice set up. There are better rests out there, but they cost $500-700 and up. I think this particular rest has been discontinued by Caldwell, so now's the time to get it.

Saturday, February 5, 2011

Friday, February 4, 2011

Spring Nationals--4th VA Assignments

Here's our duties for the Spring Nationals:

Bridge
Jim Tantillo
Chad Severt
Line Judge
Mike Aluzzo
Rich Comeau
Logistics
Bernie Shuman
Registration
Thomas Witham
Al Otash
Billy Van Dewalle
Al Torday
Tim Schott
Al Pacheco
Fred Legault
David Wright
Diane Zuck
Walt Clark
Bill Lomeli
Denise Clark
Jon Faucher
Carter Gill
Safety
Katie Witham

Saturday, January 29, 2011

The aging eyes saga continues


Been working on my shooting using a CZ 452 .22lr trainer with open iron sights, shooting 50 foot NRA targets indoors. With my normal contacts it was pretty rough; contacts with reading glasses not much better; things improved a bit with bifocal contact lenses. Today, I shot with my new eyeglasses, which have progressive lenses.

Here's the target I shot. I'm pretty pleased with the results: I could see the front sight pretty well, and as I worked on a consistent sight picture, the progressive lenses helped me maintain a consistent cheek weld as I worked to put the front sight into sharpest focus (there is a sweet spot where the front sight is clearest). This is a benefit of the progressive lenses that had not occurred to me.

Now the problem will be getting shooting glasses in polycarbonate safety lenses, especially for the carbine--those caps really explode off the nipple of the Maynard. Polycarbonate won't be cheap. But I'm thinking that my musket shooting will improve pretty dramatically by switching over to eyeglasses versus sticking with contact lenses and shooting glasses.

Monday, January 24, 2011

Carbines sent off for work

Sent 1859 Sharps off today to Charlie Hahn to have the breech block made solid, chamber sleeve o-ring modification, chamber set up for using cardboard tubes, and taller front sight. Also sent Smith carbine off to Robert Hoyt for a reline, and standardize it to shoot .515. While waiting, I need to glassbed the 1863 Type II and make a couple minor adjustments to a couple of locks. If all goes according to plan, I'll spend March casting bullets for the season, and April sighting in 3 muskets and 2 carbines.

Friday, January 14, 2011

Miroku 1863 Springfield Type 1 refinish/upgrade







Removed the varnish and re-shaped slightly (could have removed more wood). Tall dove-tail front sight added by Whitacre. Trigger smoothed and lightened by Walt. Glass bedded, and refinished. I'm planning on adding an L shaped peep rear sight for 50 and 100 yards. Weighs in at 9.9 lbs, could probably have shaved another half pound of wood.







Dixie Gunworks Japanese Springfield

I had bought a repop Model 1863 type 1 Springfield several years ago, before joining the team. It was in fact the reason I became interested in shooting rifled muskets, and also the reason I was introduced to the N-SSA. As I have some time between projects (waiting on a few parts and a mould), figured I'd try to tweak it a bit. Its made by Miroku of Japan and marked by Dixie Gunworks.
I sent the crunchy heavy pull lock to Walt, and he returned it operating smoothly, with a light trigger. So far so good. I then sanded the stock to remove the varnish and reduce some of the bulkiness. I found a .578 Hodgdon used mould on the N-SSA bulletin board.
Then I hit the wall. My first attempt at bedding didn't go well. I didn't put enough epoxy, and the two piece stock separated when I removed the barrel. So I sanded down the barrel channel, reinforced the forearm, and started over. To get a full length bed, the miroku required ALOT of Acraglas Gel. Lots of voids to fill. This second attempt was successful but...
The musket now weighs a ton. Balance isn't bad, the overweight barrel is now offset by the epoxy laden breech. I could probably put wheels on it and enter the artillery competition. The musket has stand hunter written all over it. Well, its not that bad, but it is noticeably heavier than the one I built last year, and the one I'm building this year. And its a backup to the backup.
I will post some pics soon. Just need to stain the stock and it should be all set. On another note, I'll be able to do a side by side comparison of a new Whitacre barrel and a newly relined Hoyt barrel this Spring. Neither has seen a round go through it. Both are .576, both are 3 land, I think the Whitacre is 1 in 72 and the Hoyt is 1 in 56.

Wednesday, January 12, 2011

Iowa MONSTER buck....















After waiting 3 years for the tag I was bowhunting in Iowa with a buddy, some poacher shot this with what sounded like a rifle, and it was too close for comfort. We told the land owner where we thought the shot came from (road hunter) and we both even heard the impact when the bullet hit the deer. Three days later after we left the land owner found the buck in a creek bed. He tagged it and gave it to my buddy when he went back out for shotgun season. What a deer, saw several even bigger than this guy during our week there...they just never came within bow range. Will be eagerly waiting another three years before I get another chance at one of these Iowa monsters. Unofficial score by a guy who knows what he is doing is 199 1/2" What a bruiser, what amazing whitetails that state has. ENJOY