Sooo.
What do you all do when you aren't at the range or have a rod hanging in a tree? Am I the only one who actually goes out into the woods with my firelock? I don't believe in carrying all my worldly possessions with me but I do have all I need to take care of most problems while out on my trek without having to walk back to the truck or worse drive home. As a retired Firefighter/EMT we had a saying at our daily drills: "practice like you play". If you have what you need on your person when the time actually comes that no one has a range rod or CO2 discharge tool you know you can fix the problem. Now if someone has a range rod (and I am one of them) or a CO2 discharge tool in their box (I am one of them) then by all means use them.
guess you missed this, on the first page
*****
Posts: 6398
Re: dry ball
« Reply #4 on: July 29, 2019, 05:30:49 PM »
(1st page)
"We've pulled many with the rifle's rod, but it is easier with a steel rod, as Wade notes.
Easiest is to have a 'bushed' drill (bushing holds the drill in the middle of the bore) and drill a small hole first, like about 1/8". Then
run in the ball screw (TOTWolf sells them) you buy or make yourself, bushed would be better. Run the screw in, and pull the ball out - no biggie."
I will now add to that - when hunting bunnies - many shots in a day, or when hunting moose - 1 or 2 shots I have NEVER dry balled. Not that it cannot happen,
but when hunting, there have been no distractions when loading. powder, patch, ball.