A while back i bought some reloads at a local gun show. First round, inordinately high and the shell casing stuck. I am fortunate it did as I probably wouldn't have noticed the right side of the receiver before trying another. Destroyed a really nice Springfield but could have been a bit worse
Close Call- Lesson Learned
Collapse
X
-
Tags: None
-
I'm happy for you, sad for the trapdoor. Is the rest of the rifle intact? Receivers can be had..."A man with a tractor and a chain saw has no excuses, nor does he need any"
Me. "Consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds" Emerson "Consistency is the darling of those that stack wood or cast bullets" Me.Comment
-
OUCH!! Double charge of 2400 maybe? You have to be SO careful of low-volume fast burning powder when loading smokeless in large cases. If you load in bulk the last step is to ALWAYS take your block to a GOOD light and make SURE the powder height is uniform.Comment
-
who knows what those reloads were or what they were for unless of course they were specifically sold to the Kieth as reloads for trapdoors. As I was doing my chores this morning I was recalling this post and wondering about reloads for modern rifles ending up in trapdoors."A man with a tractor and a chain saw has no excuses, nor does he need any"
Me. "Consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds" Emerson "Consistency is the darling of those that stack wood or cast bullets" Me.Comment
-
Why shoot smokeless, let alone someones reloads, in a rifle designed for blackpowder ?When the debate is lost, slander becomes the tool of the loser, SocratesComment
-
Well all is not lost, Dixie Gun Works should have recievers.
The ONLY reloads I shoot are the ones I load.
AND the ONLY powder I use is black powder!!!Comment
-
Al Frasca always has receivers on his site:
http://www.trapdoorcollector.com/
Good luck and please, Keep us posted."A man with a tractor and a chain saw has no excuses, nor does he need any"
Me. "Consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds" Emerson "Consistency is the darling of those that stack wood or cast bullets" Me.Comment
-
It's going to take more than a receiver to repair that! The barrel is bulged at the threads and the chamber will be unusable. Will people ever learn not to use pistol powder in a trapdoor?Comment
-
Comment
-
and they would have used M-16s and a couple of A-10s would have been handy at Little Big Horn, but they didn't have them back then, so the gun was designed to use a blackpowder cartridge, too much of a chance of destroying a gun by using powder it was not designed for.When the debate is lost, slander becomes the tool of the loser, SocratesComment
-
have we ascertained the cause of failure? was the bore checked before use? do we know it was a double charge of a fast burning powder? were the reloads sold as "trapdoor" reloads to the OP or were they simply 45-70 cartridges picked up off the table? Can the OP find the individual that sold the reloads or is that person long gone? These are the things that I'm wondering about.
Please pull some of these loads and measure the powder and post pictures!Last edited by Mark Daiute; 06-08-2013, 03:06."A man with a tractor and a chain saw has no excuses, nor does he need any"
Me. "Consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds" Emerson "Consistency is the darling of those that stack wood or cast bullets" Me.Comment
-
IMHO, the problem is NOT with using smokeless powder, per se, as there are plenty of perfectly safe smokeless loads which can be assembled, if care is taken.
The problem was in trusting someone else's stuff in a potentially dangerous situation. It would be instructive to learn what was in the cases.Comment
-
And we can easily replicate those BP loads with modern powders but we have to pay attention because of lot of the equivalent smokeless loads are way less than full volume charges in that cavernous .45-70 case.and they would have used M-16s and a couple of A-10s would have been handy at Little Big Horn, but they didn't have them back then, so the gun was designed to use a blackpowder cartridge, too much of a chance of destroying a gun by using powder it was not designed for.
Further aggravating the situation is that a lot of people bump the loads up for modern lever actions and bump them up even further for guns like the Ruger #1 & #3. that's fine if you're shooting one of those guns, but if you pass out handloads to a buddy who might be shooting a Trapdoor, he's in trouble.
dale in LouisianaComment

Comment