Thanks Roger, I will try that. The rifle was shooting fine until I changed the flint. The hole to the right on the 100 yard target had four flash in the pan. Then, it fired on the fifth try after I changed another flint. I changed the original flint, I think, on the seventh shot at the 50 yard target.
Daryl, The starters in the photo was by PM, and I watched your two loading and shooting videos off and on for three days. I think I might cut my ram rod to 46” round off the rod to fit my ball starter and load like you do in the video. I am not throwing the rod onto the ball. I am holding the rod tight and forcefully ramming the rod against the seated ball. Yes, if you were there, you would say, "look, he meals the powder."
On the lock, Jim said. “…is a modified Jim Chambers early Ketland.”
The first photo is the one that came in Jim’s rifle, and the next one is the flint that is in the rifle now. That flint was ordered from Track of wolf, and it is a 3/4x7/8” number FLINT-ENG-6. Monday, I am going to order some 7/8 x 1" FLINT-ENG-7 flints.
I hate to say this, but I missed a massive 8 pt. this morning. About daylight the 7 pt. I shot at last month came by my stand and acted spooked. I figured he either saw me move or caught my sent. I had one good shot in the rear, but I decided not to shoot him. We have a 3 pt. rule, and I did not get a good look at his horns. About 15 minutes later, an 8 pt. was following the other buck. He stopped about 20 steps from me with his nose on the ground. When he looked up, I pulled the trigger. He ran off when he saw the flash in the pan. Man!
When the flint burns the pan powder with the rifle not going off, there is another problem and not the flint. I have a vent pick coming, so could this be my problem.
I clean the flintlock different than my T/C. I notice that there are powder grains on the patch. Could this be getting into the touch hole?
I’m sure doing something wrong doulos.
If I don’t prove my manhood and bring home the meat, the Old Lady may find someone that can.
Mike