Spring has sprung. Get out and shoot your Henry
April 8th, 1860; the spring buffalo hunt
Re: April 8th, 1860; the spring buffalo hunt
NO No at the piles
1 x
Don't worry about getting older and still doing stupid stuff. You'll do the stupid stuff as always, only much slower. Hold my beer and watch this.......
H001T .22LR
H001T .22LR MONUMENT VALLEY
H003T PUMP .22LR
BBS .41 MAG
SS .357
SIDE GATE 38-55
H001T .22LR
H001T .22LR MONUMENT VALLEY
H003T PUMP .22LR
BBS .41 MAG
SS .357
SIDE GATE 38-55
- RetiredSeabee
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Re: April 8th, 1860; the spring buffalo hunt
Love your range reports. Thanks for the time travel.
1 x
Load on Sunday and Shoot all Week.......okay it's a Mare's Leg I will reload on Wednesday.
- RanchRoper
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Re: April 8th, 1860; the spring buffalo hunt
That's the beauty of these old style lever actions & revolvers....you cannot help but be transported back to the wild frontier!RetiredSeabee wrote:Love your range reports. Thanks for the time travel.
No wonder we like 'em!
1 x
1860 Colt SA Richards Conversion Revolver .45C
1860 Henry .45C
1885 High Wall .45C
1820-1840 Frontier Percussion .50
1790-1820 Frontier Flintlock .50
Ohkínohkomit - Shoot skillfully
1860 Henry .45C
1885 High Wall .45C
1820-1840 Frontier Percussion .50
1790-1820 Frontier Flintlock .50
Ohkínohkomit - Shoot skillfully
Re: April 8th, 1860; the spring buffalo hunt
Great range report! And, your incredible photos always help with the time travel. Much faster than a stage coach
0 x
Made by Henry, Or Not Made At All
Re: April 8th, 1860; the spring buffalo hunt
Nice shooting!
0 x
Actions speak louder than words (Matthew 7:16-20).
- RanchRoper
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- Joined: Mon Mar 21, 2016 12:14 am
- Location: Land of Shining Mountains, Alberta
Re: April 8th, 1860; the spring buffalo hunt
Thanks all!
0 x
1860 Colt SA Richards Conversion Revolver .45C
1860 Henry .45C
1885 High Wall .45C
1820-1840 Frontier Percussion .50
1790-1820 Frontier Flintlock .50
Ohkínohkomit - Shoot skillfully
1860 Henry .45C
1885 High Wall .45C
1820-1840 Frontier Percussion .50
1790-1820 Frontier Flintlock .50
Ohkínohkomit - Shoot skillfully
- JEBar
- Town Marshal / Deputy Admin
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- Location: central NC
Re: April 8th, 1860; the spring buffalo hunt
just curious .... with the untold numbers of jacketed rounds you've run through your 45, have you run a patch through it coated with a copper solvent ?
0 x
- RanchRoper
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- Location: Land of Shining Mountains, Alberta
Re: April 8th, 1860; the spring buffalo hunt
I only shoot lead; have never shot copper jacketed rounds through either the revolver or the 1860. I did shoot a couple of boxes of American Eagle JSP's with the Big Boy I had, but nothing since. I have a box or two left of the JSP's, might use them in the revolver sometime but that's all. I have copper barrel cleaner but only used it on the Big Boy before I sold it, there was a hint of green on the patch but not much. Copper worries me in the rifle for sure, so I stick with lead flat nose bullets only. Too bad because 45 Colt FMJ copper rounds can be purchased in bulk in Canada from Western Munitions. So I'm always on the hunt for cheap lead.
I know I know....reload. If I ever had a place to set it up properly and the time to actually do it, I may get into it someday. By then I'll have a million brass casings....I actually found a supplier for reloaded ammo that is approved by Natural Resources Canada (game warden guys), and supplies some regional police forces. Talking to him the last few days and will try some of his 45 Colt. 1 time fired Starline brass, 200 gr or 255 gr, no hot loads, they cast their own lead. Been at it since 1993. Sounds promising and at 68 cents a round, that is best price I've seen. Shipping extra of course, but might be a good way to stock up.
ps....rifle gets a good clean this weekend. How much is too much cleaning? I clean every couple of hundred rounds or so. I always get two or three dirty lead patches until it gets clean. What do you guys do?
Info below on the reloading guy: Note* this is NOT "Wolf Ammo" made by some Russian company....this is a different guy in eastern Canada. I checked.
Discover the best in remanufactured ammunition for consistently great results at a price you can afford. Wolf remanufactured ammunition is the best in commercially reloaded product. All cartridge specifications have been certified by Natural Resources Canada and cartridges are checked regularly on a Trius pressure gun for product consistency. Wolf ammunition velocities are designed around IPSC (International Practical Shooting Confederation) standards and are used by top shooters and organizations across Canada.
.45 Long Colt Wolf Remanufactured Ammunition 250gr - Wolf Brass - Lead Round Nose Flat Point (RNFP) - 1 Box, 50 rounds
Caliber: .45 Long Colt
Grain: 250gr
The Process to Great Remanufactured Ammo All brass casings used are commercial, once fired non-military. All rimless brass is full length sized before loading to return cases to factory specifications. Rimmed brass is roll sized which resizes the portion of the case conventional dies cannot reach, returning the cases to factory dimensions. Rimless brass is mechanically sorted and goes through an initial cleaning. It is then lubed and pushed base first through a carbide die. Any bulges that may be present from the initial firing are removed as it passes completely through the die. A Scharch Auto-Reamer then checks for case deformation and cracks. The brass is de-primed and a rotary tool chamfers the primer pocket. The brass is then sent for final polishing and loading.
I know I know....reload. If I ever had a place to set it up properly and the time to actually do it, I may get into it someday. By then I'll have a million brass casings....I actually found a supplier for reloaded ammo that is approved by Natural Resources Canada (game warden guys), and supplies some regional police forces. Talking to him the last few days and will try some of his 45 Colt. 1 time fired Starline brass, 200 gr or 255 gr, no hot loads, they cast their own lead. Been at it since 1993. Sounds promising and at 68 cents a round, that is best price I've seen. Shipping extra of course, but might be a good way to stock up.
ps....rifle gets a good clean this weekend. How much is too much cleaning? I clean every couple of hundred rounds or so. I always get two or three dirty lead patches until it gets clean. What do you guys do?
Info below on the reloading guy: Note* this is NOT "Wolf Ammo" made by some Russian company....this is a different guy in eastern Canada. I checked.
Discover the best in remanufactured ammunition for consistently great results at a price you can afford. Wolf remanufactured ammunition is the best in commercially reloaded product. All cartridge specifications have been certified by Natural Resources Canada and cartridges are checked regularly on a Trius pressure gun for product consistency. Wolf ammunition velocities are designed around IPSC (International Practical Shooting Confederation) standards and are used by top shooters and organizations across Canada.
.45 Long Colt Wolf Remanufactured Ammunition 250gr - Wolf Brass - Lead Round Nose Flat Point (RNFP) - 1 Box, 50 rounds
Caliber: .45 Long Colt
Grain: 250gr
The Process to Great Remanufactured Ammo All brass casings used are commercial, once fired non-military. All rimless brass is full length sized before loading to return cases to factory specifications. Rimmed brass is roll sized which resizes the portion of the case conventional dies cannot reach, returning the cases to factory dimensions. Rimless brass is mechanically sorted and goes through an initial cleaning. It is then lubed and pushed base first through a carbide die. Any bulges that may be present from the initial firing are removed as it passes completely through the die. A Scharch Auto-Reamer then checks for case deformation and cracks. The brass is de-primed and a rotary tool chamfers the primer pocket. The brass is then sent for final polishing and loading.
0 x
1860 Colt SA Richards Conversion Revolver .45C
1860 Henry .45C
1885 High Wall .45C
1820-1840 Frontier Percussion .50
1790-1820 Frontier Flintlock .50
Ohkínohkomit - Shoot skillfully
1860 Henry .45C
1885 High Wall .45C
1820-1840 Frontier Percussion .50
1790-1820 Frontier Flintlock .50
Ohkínohkomit - Shoot skillfully
- JEBar
- Town Marshal / Deputy Admin
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- Joined: Sun Mar 20, 2016 10:58 pm
- Location: central NC
Re: April 8th, 1860; the spring buffalo hunt
thanks for the info .... I didn't realize you use lead bullets .... have you had any issues with lead accumulation .... as to cleaning, we clean the inside of the barrel after every outing .... when hunting and not firing a shot we still run an oil patch down the barrel prior to putting the firearm in the vault .... we also take care to wipe down the outside .... with the exception of our 11-87 shotgun, I seldom take a firearm completely apart for cleaning .... I have done so but simply haven't often found the need to do so
1 x
- RanchRoper
- Forum Ambassador
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- Joined: Mon Mar 21, 2016 12:14 am
- Location: Land of Shining Mountains, Alberta
Re: April 8th, 1860; the spring buffalo hunt
Just posted an edit with more info.
No issues with lead, although my hair is falling out...kidding it was falling out long before that. It seems good, and who doesn't like great big lead cowboy bullets?
No issues with lead, although my hair is falling out...kidding it was falling out long before that. It seems good, and who doesn't like great big lead cowboy bullets?
0 x
1860 Colt SA Richards Conversion Revolver .45C
1860 Henry .45C
1885 High Wall .45C
1820-1840 Frontier Percussion .50
1790-1820 Frontier Flintlock .50
Ohkínohkomit - Shoot skillfully
1860 Henry .45C
1885 High Wall .45C
1820-1840 Frontier Percussion .50
1790-1820 Frontier Flintlock .50
Ohkínohkomit - Shoot skillfully