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Minies for my Hawken?

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Macgille

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Joined
May 6, 2007
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Location
N. Calif
I recently got a Lee Mould for .50 Cal. minie balls. Has anyone ever used these in a sidelock rifle? I have a Hawken replica circa 1990 (Uberti?) Do they fly good?
 
What's the rate of twist on your Hawken (the location of the ignition source isn't important - the barrel's length and rate of twist are)?
 
What mykeal says. Depends on the twist. If the twist is 1:66, it may not stabilize the minie. It could be one of those 1:48 which might do it.
 
1:48 is a bullet twist. The other factor is rifling depth - you want shallow rifling for minies to be able to engage the rifling and seal - typically if the rifle has the 1:48, it will have shallow rifling. In a 1:66, or roundball, barrel, the rifling is usually deeper since the patch is doing the sealing work. As to barrel length, T/C made some real short barrel hunting rifles designed for bullet shooting.

All this info is worth what you paid - I've never contaminated any of my blackpowder guns with either bullets or Pyrodex - all patched round ball over black powder. Not a snob (well, not much) just never done it. And don't plan to...
 
Too short? I'm not sure there is one, unless it's a derringer...

You should have no problem with a minie and a carbine length barrel in 1:48.

White Mountain Carbine?
 
Actually Mykeal it's a "Buckeye Carbine" being from southwestern Ohio I had a favorable issue with the model name. You mentioned in post #4 that barrel length was an issue along with rate of twist. The rifle barrel measures 19 3/8". Short little bugger
 
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Thanx for the replies gentlemen. I haven't had a chance to shoot for a while. I was hit in the ankle by a steel blade flying off a weed eater. Got infected and I have been out of action for a while.

The Hawken has a 1:48 twist. I shot round balls and the Lee R.E.A.L. bullet and the accuracy was not great. I don't like pounding the R.E.A.L into the barrel, but I did make a brass false muzzle for it so I didn't damage the crown. I think I have been using too much powder for this barrel. I know that some barrels like milder loads than others. I thought I would use a starting load of 50 gr. and go up 5 gr. at a time until I reach 80 gr. or the groups open up more.
 
As having a tc 50 hawkin since 1978,I've tried a number of things ,including a gm bl due to the new non corosive pyrodex[it was listed as such at first].I also have a .50 lee minnie mold hollow base,and my gm 1-28 will not shoot.I can shoot with maxi's and it's a wonderful rifle with 75-100 gr ffg and 370 maxi.
I was reading on Track of the wolf website when I found the reason,hb minnies were DESIGNEDFOR SLOW TWIST[1-60]bls,and will not stabilize in fast twist due to weight fwd. The 1-48 is middle of the road,so you may stabilize them;probably on the lower powder scale.
 
Sometimes loading a wool wad under the solid base conicals helps with the accuracy. It seals up the rifling grooves and provides a little bit of cushion upon ignition. It doesn't hurt to givr them a try if you can get the wads.
I've even loaded the .45 MaxiHunters in a sabot and they shot pretty good at 50 yards from a 1 in 48" loaded with about 90 grains of Pyrodex P. Remove the factory lube beforehand.
 
When Power-Belts first came out I was curious so I bought some to try, my intention was to use them strictly for hunting the advantage of being easy and fast to load was the main attraction. I liked them but I found that they were very expensive even to work up a load. Then it dawned on me that the Power-Belt is just a re-invention of the minie-ball. I bought moulds and haven't looked back since. That was over 10 years ago.
 
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