Hello Everyone,
I'm a 32 year old child thats looking to learn a thing or two, been lurking around here for years (like 12 years
). Finally got a .58 kibler kit finished up last fall to fulfil my mountain man fantasies. Im quite experienced with normal muzzleloaders but have never had a flintlock or hunted with roundballs. I'm also proficient at un-aliving cute cuddly tasty creatures with all methods. But this flintlock game is my next learning adventure. Especially the part where i make it go bang cleanly every time
Currently going thru the familiarization process with my new toy and its going well. I'll probably find some other things to ask about in the future, but i'll start with hunting loads/sighting methodology.
I spent some time with it the other day. Probably shot around 15 times and had no misfires and everything touched off smoothly with no delays. Had a bit of a hangfire the night before on a coyote however. humidity and carrying it around got to me. Despite changing out the null B several times. Probably stick to 4f from now on.
I managed to draw a NM elk tag this fall and have my mind set on doing it with this .58.
On to the load....
My current load that im trying is 120gr of swiss 2f, 4f prime, mink oil, .018 patch(
? i dont remember, been awhile since ive bought them, got them from TOTW) and a hornady ball. It loads smoothly enough and i didnt have to swab the bore at all while shooting. It seems to shoot well enough that any discrepancies are probably me. (i did try an 100 gr load for deer last fall, my first time on the range with a flintlock, shot about ~3" group at 75 yards, good enough for me)
Attached is a pick of a patch. Would this be considered a blown patch? Accuracy seemed good, within a few inches of where i was aiming out to 110 yards. But i wasnt bench rested either. And like i said, the barrel didnt seem crudded while loading.
I've read that some people like to use a harder alloy on larger creatures. Would it be recommended to switch away from the hornady balls for elk before i dial in my sights further? Or is the hornady ball adequate (its definitely easier, i dont mind pouring my own, ive got lead, but adding another variable to the accuracy equation seems unpreferable).
The target attached was mostly shot from a seated position resting on the top of my kifaru pack frame, but also a few standing shots were taken. 25-110 yards (stepped off, forgot my rangefinder). I started off up close at 25 aiming at the center of the box, hitting high and left. Scooted back, drifted the sight over and aimed at the bottom of the box. At 50-75 yards im hitting about 12-14" high. At 100-110 i was about 8" high (one of the circled bottom 2 shots, the other was a 25 yard freehand aiming at the bottom of the box). And i took a prone shot at ~150yds holding center the target which landed below the target (fairly expected but was curious).
Personally i kind of liked aiming at the bottom of the box versus trying to align the blade with the center of a box. With a recurve bow i would reference my arrow with the bottom of a deers chest. I find that aiming like that is less mentally stressful and i can focus more on shot execution. Im sure its something to do with having a hard thing (belly line) to aim at on an otherwise homogenous looking surface. I've only killed one elk previously, but if i hold bottom of the chest and the ball hits from 8-14" above that i should have a dead elk. this methodology may not work on a deer or bear, but im mainly focused on this being an elk gun at the moment, and am going to be pretty deliberate about taking a nice broadside shot.
approximate POI's at ranges:
25 yards: 8" high
50 yards: 12-14" high
75 yards: 12-14" high
100-110 yards: 8-10" high
150 yards: way low
Any counter thoughts on my aiming philosophy? I'll be trying to get as close as possible of course. But if i can hit that ~18" box every time i should be eating well come winter.