I wouldn't give a red cent for any muzzle loader with a 13/16 50 caliber barrel no matter who makes it and a 45 would be my limit.Any barrel maker that makes such a barrel should have a big liability insurance policy because personal injury lawyers are waiting in the shadows.I can not be hired to install any kind of a drum and nipple in such a barrel.THAT is the reason special breech plugs that CAN be safely threaded are made or can be made.
It makes no difference as to how many of these are around and the one that blew up and mangled a hand was a 13/16 45 caliber not a 13/16 50 caliber.I will not knowing shoot beside such a rifle.
Bob Roller
ML barrel makers are protected by the "handloader defense". So they are pretty much immune from legal problems and know it.
For those who think that proofing a 12l14 barrel means anything remember that if the bar the barrel was made from has no flaws its very unlikely to fail. Even with flaws it may not fail. But if it has flaws, and they ALL DO since there is no standard for low grade steels, its a $#@* shoot. But the barrel wall on most ML barrels is so thick that this provides a little more safety. People might look to the Remington shotgun lawsuit from some years back the the alloy used and the reason it failed in service even after being prooved by Remington.
Yeah, I know, I have heard it all over the last 50 years or so. Remember that the Springfield Rifle Musket barrels were skelp welded iron, thin walled and proved with 200 gr of Musket Powder and a 500 gr Minie spaced 2" off the powder. Its virtually impossible to blow one up from reports I read years ago when people decided to try to blow one up.
Then you have to ask: "WhY DID THEY USE IRON AND NOT STEEL"? Because at the time, 1850s/60s, "best iron" was better gun barrel material, safer, than the steels of the time. Even though many rifles were being made with "cast steel' barrels (remember ALL steel is cast to this day) The alloying process for making steel was at best primitive and laughable by modern standards but good iron was well known and reliable at the ML pressure levels. And the higher pressure "slug guns" of the time had heavy barrels.
Dan