What precautions do you take when firing and old firearm like this for the first time?
What precautions do you take when firing and old firearm like this for the first time?
Ear and eye protection only.
This rifle is only 100 years old, made of quality Swedish carbon steel by a very good gunmaking company.
It is in perfect mechanical condition.
The bores are good
The barrels ring true when tapped with a brass hammer
I am shooting back powder only in it which is what it was made for and Proofed for.
The Lefaucheux type underlever double bite action is renowned for its strength and safe long service.
Black Powder generates modest pressures around 12K PSI which is what the rifle was designed for.
So if there are no obvious red flags it's good to go.
Sometimes I would test a black powder rifle from a sand bag bench with a trigger string, but I don't buy rifles in that sort of condition
I will test the full cock hammer sears buy firing a lest barrel with the right hammer cooked on an empty chamber to check it doesn't fire under recoil.
And visa versa
But I generally never cock both hammers while hunting with my doubles because the animals I hunt I eat rather than them eating me
Good old guns are safe guns if you are shooting the load and bullets they were intended for.
Try and run trailboss or nitro for black in them and all bets are off
The Church of
John Browning
of the Later-Day Shooter
Yeah i also shoot alot of guns for the 1st time
The biggest thing in my opinion is to insure a safe rifle
Some rifles you just know they are fine as soon as you pick them up
Others require a full disassembly and inspection and maybe a replacement part or two
2nd biggest thing is use the correct ammunition
Any smokeless powder is a no no black powder only
The correctly sized projectiles etc
A chamber casting will tell you all the information you need about what the rifle shoots
To be brutally honest I feel safer firing a 100 year old BP rifle in good condition than I would a brand new budget Tupperware nitro rifle
This rifle is early 1900s and well into the nitro era
Husqvarna kept making them because there was still a market for them.
But they were still using the steel that was going into their nitro guns
It it's surprisingly hard or you have to be astonishingly stupid to blow up a BP gun with BP
The Church of
John Browning
of the Later-Day Shooter
Very very cool!
I kind of imagine the choice of barrels gave the option for moose or roe and fox etc on a drive.
Unsophisticated... AF!
Give Ken Tustin a call, he might put you onto a spot now you've got it going!
I got a box of CBC berdan primed brass in the mail this morning
Converted one to take a 209 shotgun primer
Shortened to 46mm
Annealed the neck and loaded it up.
Worked just fine and I fired it a few times
The Church of
John Browning
of the Later-Day Shooter
Made 4 of the 209 primed cases so I now have 8 loaded rounds in total and enough to go hunting
I have long 20 gauge plastic hulls and .315" lead balls coming and then I will work out a buck shot load for the straight rifled barrel and I will be ready for anything out hunting
The Church of
John Browning
of the Later-Day Shooter
I like your target. No chance of messing up which hole is which cartridge haha
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