Hi everyone,
Thought I'd check in after my recent experimentation with my new rifle. Just to get you updated, I ordered a used T/C Hawken as a learning rifle; if I can get good enough I'm hoping to take it out in Oct. for early muzzleloader season. In short order, I also got in touch with TVM and placed an order for a good early Lancaster--where my heart truly lies. I ordered it with a swamped barrel, german silver furniture, 3 piece daisy patchbox, a couple of inlays (hunter's star and acorn), and the super premium wood option. Since I got the best wood they have, I decided not to gussy it up with much more than that. Selling the Hawken later, or a couple of my centerfires, should make it checkbook friendly--overall, they are very reasonable for a custom piece with all the goodies and Toni is extraordinarily friendly as a customer service rep, esp. in this day and age.
Today I took the Hawken out to try it out. I talked to a lot of people who have used them and just about memorized the T/C's manual in preparation. I started with just 50 grains of powder (the smallest load charted in the back of the manual) and worked up to 80. The recoil in all cases was milder than I thought it would be. And the delay between the priming charge going off and full ignition was not as long as I thought it would be. Though I've got to say I was flinching all over the place out of excitement!
Had a couple of misfires, so the advice to get a CO2 discharger was spot on. Otherwise my day would have been ruined. The first was due to the frizzen getting a little dirty, or oily, or something--I wiped it down and then it sparked just fine. The second time, the amber French flint I put in there had just lost its edge. At that point I called it quits. Probably got less than 20 rounds off, but that took me about 2 hours. Now I think I've got the basic order of things down, though I'm still hoping to touch base with an instructor soon so I don't start making stupid mistakes that become part of my modus operandi.
Didn't have much of a pattern. I got on the paper about 2/3 of the time, but my main purpose of going today was to learn how to fire the thing. I found that basic rules of firearms handling plus some common sense worked wonders. I had half expected there to be some secret ritual involved but it was very straightforward: clean the bore, add the charge, add patch and ball, short start it, seat it on the charge, pick the touchole, prime the pan, shoulder the gun: fire! It fired a lot more like a modern rifle than I thought it would, with the added time between shots.
Incidentally I also found that those little flossing picks from CVS work well as touchole picks; they're soft enough not to scratch, yet they clean it out really well.
Thanks for all the advice; much of the advice you guys gave me so far has been spot on.
One question: how do you know when the frizzen is getting worn out?
Question 2: The TC manual recommends "laying a fuse" in the touch hole as a path for the ignitio to follow. Though the Blackpowder manual some of you guys recommended says this slows down ignition. Who is right?