Charlielee
Member
- Joined
- Nov 11, 2013
- Messages
- 21
Back when the Thompson Center Hawken came out I always used pure lead greased patched balls with pillow ticking for the patch. It was a .50 caliber. The day before deer season opened for muzzle loaders I was inclined to try a .50 cal maxi-ball and tried one at a gun range at Cuyahoga Falls north of Akron. It shot ok but without cleaning the barrel the second one stuck hard about 6-7" down the muzzle. I had greased the grooves of the maxi-balls and there was not getting it to move. I wound up getting a drill bit extension and drilled a 1/4" hole through it. Then took a long 3/8 lag bolt that had a round large ring on the end. I wound up putting the barrel in a wood lined vice and placed a long tire iron through it with the lower end wedged on the end of the work bench. Then I whacked the dickens on the top end the bar with a 6 lb. hammer. Needless to say I have never tried another maxi-ball.
So I went to using the plastic wads that would curl over the ball while ramming it down to hold it in against the powder. Yes, I shot at two deer and the shot went whoosh, no ball. The fifth shot at a deer I killed it.
They are a lot of fun but could make a person waste the cost of a large elk license if you don't perfect the patched ball or use the plastic ringed sealing bullets. They aren't legal in Colorado though.
So I went to using the plastic wads that would curl over the ball while ramming it down to hold it in against the powder. Yes, I shot at two deer and the shot went whoosh, no ball. The fifth shot at a deer I killed it.
They are a lot of fun but could make a person waste the cost of a large elk license if you don't perfect the patched ball or use the plastic ringed sealing bullets. They aren't legal in Colorado though.