Just got a Traditions Kentucky kit. By ALR standards it is a horrid thing - no style, ghastly lock internals, assembly methods, &c, &c.
Yeah. Nevertheless I picked a Traditions kit for three reasons.
What first got my attention was this video that shows two guys torturing a Traditions "Kentucky" to blow it up with a couple grades of Hodgdon smokeless.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=en384qVqrug&feature=youtu.be No, I would never use any amount of smokeless in this or any other muzzle loader. It was the manner in which this thing blew that impressed me. Early in the test the first damage the gun showed, with smokeless, was the barrel bulged about half way along. Didn't actually burst but I think that bulge would have gotten many (not all, sadly) shooters' attention. Then later with a heavier load the whole breech end blew off. The bulged area was still more or less OK, I think. To a guy who has seen various broken metal thingies since JFK was foolin' around with Marilyn this was significant.
Second, I remember about two score years back doing metallography on an odd piece of CVA rifle barrel, just curious. It looked to be a nice, CLEAN low carbon steel. Maybe like a 1015 or 1018, annealed. CLEAN means it had no sulfur stringers or bits of lead in it. When machined, the chips would be long and stringy. Cutting today's common American barrel steel makes short, crumbly chips.
I do not like "crumbly" steel associated with any barrel I might shoot.
When I unpacked the barrel I got a surprise. This beautiful stamping -
I am told that CIP (Commission Internationale Permanente Pour L'epreuve des Armes a Feu Portatives) is the European equivalent of SAAMI. PN and the shield represents an Eibar proof house.
Would like it if someone can confirm this, with a reference to such information.
Anyway I think this barrel ain't made of no $#@!!&%* free-machining steel and I can maybe comfortably shoot it with black. Yup, that Pain-in-the-### metallurgist is finally happy. For himself.
Hope to turn the kit into a Faux Leman Indian rifle, with the help of painted stripes, old tacks, a TOW capbox & maybe some rawhide. Even at my best, the results will not be suitable for inclusion here with the craftsmen of ALR. But it will give me something to mess around with.