Spring has sprung. Get out and shoot your Henry
Safe loading of your Henry
- Ojaileveraction
- Cowboy
- Posts: 1292
- Joined: Tue Apr 04, 2017 11:49 pm
Safe loading of your Henry
Safe loading of your Henry.
I don't mean Long Rangers.
For my BBB
Lever closed, hammer down.
I will stand my rifle up but on a table or stool or my toe if that is all there is.
Holding with one hand around the barrel below the muzzle the other hand turning and lifting the tube till it's clear, the first hand holding it while the second loads.
Keeping the muzzle pointed up and away from the line and my hands away from the muzzle.
The rimfire I can keep the hammer at half cock, lever fully open other wise the same.
A club I shot at they all lay the rifle on the carpeted barrier/ table holding it up side down and pointing slightly up, pull out the tube and load.
How do you folks load you tube mag.
I don't mean Long Rangers.
For my BBB
Lever closed, hammer down.
I will stand my rifle up but on a table or stool or my toe if that is all there is.
Holding with one hand around the barrel below the muzzle the other hand turning and lifting the tube till it's clear, the first hand holding it while the second loads.
Keeping the muzzle pointed up and away from the line and my hands away from the muzzle.
The rimfire I can keep the hammer at half cock, lever fully open other wise the same.
A club I shot at they all lay the rifle on the carpeted barrier/ table holding it up side down and pointing slightly up, pull out the tube and load.
How do you folks load you tube mag.
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Pax at Justitia
Re: Safe loading of your Henry
Typically I simply hold mine with my left hand, muzzle slightly up and slide out the tube to clear the cutout, add rounds and close the tube.
Often I am outside without a bench so this is the easiest for me.
This is where a load gate is undeniably more convenient, I.E. loading outside with no where to rest the rifle but I can load my Henry pretty fast and smoothly as I described.
Often I am outside without a bench so this is the easiest for me.
This is where a load gate is undeniably more convenient, I.E. loading outside with no where to rest the rifle but I can load my Henry pretty fast and smoothly as I described.
Last edited by Mistered on Mon Apr 22, 2019 10:26 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Safe loading of your Henry
I do something similar. I tilt my gun slightly, maybe at 2 o'clock or so. I am somewhat cautious about too great of a force on the primer. I use the cutout most of the time.
Last edited by GFK on Wed Apr 24, 2019 5:58 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Actions speak louder than words (Matthew 7:16-20).
Re: Safe loading of your Henry
I was thinking something similar.Mistered wrote:. . .
This is where a load gate is undeniably more convenient, I.E. loading outside with no where to rest the rifle . . .
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Actions speak louder than words (Matthew 7:16-20).
Re: Safe loading of your Henry
There is simply nothing more satisfying (lever gun wise) than having a load gate system tube spring adjusted so perfectly as to when you push a round in the gate the tension holds it just enough to keep from pushing it back out so the round 'sticks' and holds the gate open and you just push another round in on the base of that one and so on till its full.I was thinking something similar.
My 1899 Mod 94 is perfect in this respect and I need to cut a couple more coils off the tube springs in my other two Winchesters until I get the same load action.
Last edited by Mistered on Tue Apr 23, 2019 2:29 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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- RanchRoper
- Forum Ambassador
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- Joined: Mon Mar 21, 2016 12:14 am
- Location: Land of Shining Mountains, Alberta
Re: Safe loading of your Henry
With my 1860 I have a slight angle while I cradle in my right arm. Then the rounds are loaded with my left hand. The angle is enough they slide but no slamming into each other. Load same way every time. 12 rounds later, it's go time.
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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
- Ojaileveraction
- Cowboy
- Posts: 1292
- Joined: Tue Apr 04, 2017 11:49 pm
Re: Safe loading of your Henry
All the rimfires in this type of Silhouette are tube fed.
My Henry of course doesn't have a loading gate.
I have my routine I'm don't need a change in it right now.
My Henry of course doesn't have a loading gate.
I have my routine I'm don't need a change in it right now.
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Pax at Justitia
Re: Safe loading of your Henry
Brass .30-30 with octagon barrel. It's muzzle heavy and hard to load when out in the open. Have to sit or kneel with the rifle across in my lap or knee with enough of an upward angle to let the ammo slide down the tube, and with left hand through the lever with fingers wrapped around the stock hand grip to keep the lever from popping open when I close the mag tube. I don't do vertical loading of .30-30 ammo just in case.
Ojaileveraction wrote:Safe loading of your Henry. ....How do you folks load you tube mag.
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Re: Safe loading of your Henry
Unfortunately even on YouTube you"ll find some of those who even have their own channels and demonstrate numerous guns doing this wrong. I can't even tell you the number of posts I read where people have seen others doing this wrong and some who have actually experienced an unfortunate accident for doing so. Not a good thing that's for sure.RanchRoper wrote:With my 1860 I have a slight angle while I cradle in my right arm. Then the rounds are loaded with my left hand. The angle is enough they slide but no slamming into each other. Load same way every time. 12 rounds later, it's go time.
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