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Deer Hunting
Transporting a Charged Muzzle-loader
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<blockquote data-quote="Ninering62" data-source="post: 2618277" data-attributes="member: 114278"><p>Theres a whole lot of stuff that you're just not getting dude.</p><p>1st) nowhere that I know of, is there any law or rule of " no shooting after dark ". There IS - NO hunting or shooting at any game 30 min after sunset genrally. NOTHING - ANYWHERE says one can not fire their muzzleloader into the ground to discharge it, if thats what they choose to do.</p><p>2nd) There is NO NEED to discharge your muzzleloader at the end of every day. Period!</p><p>My sidelocks charged with Goex or Pyrodex ( back when I hunted with them ) didn't get discharged at the end of the day, only the cap removal is necessary & making sure the gun does not get put into a drastic temp change to where the barrel will sweat. No big deal!</p><p>My inlines charged with T7 or BH 209 get loaded before I head into the woods & stay charged until I shoot something. They stay charged the whole deer season essentially. Again, no big deal.</p><p>3rd) RCBS makes a handy little C02 bullet/charge dischargee tool so one can use that into the nipple or BP & safely blow their bullet & charge into a towel or teeshirt & reuse the bullet as well as recover most of the reusable powder. </p><p>4th) With inlines, the best way to remove your charge is to remove the BP then just push everything out the breech end ( maybe over a tray or something to catch most of your powder. By simply NOT using anti-seize or grease on the BP threads, instead of only using Teflon tape on your BP's threads, you'll easily negate that prob/excuse as well. SIMPLE - RIGHT</p><p>5th) A muzzleloader IS NOT the same or same classification as a centerfire weapon. By simply removing the cap or primer, renders that gun 100% UNFIREABLE = a bludgeoning implement & nothing more. The same rules/laws DO NOT APPLY.</p><p>Hopefully, you can wrap your head around this, bc it won't ever get put more completely, more plainly, & more simply for you anywhere.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Ninering62, post: 2618277, member: 114278"] Theres a whole lot of stuff that you're just not getting dude. 1st) nowhere that I know of, is there any law or rule of " no shooting after dark ". There IS - NO hunting or shooting at any game 30 min after sunset genrally. NOTHING - ANYWHERE says one can not fire their muzzleloader into the ground to discharge it, if thats what they choose to do. 2nd) There is NO NEED to discharge your muzzleloader at the end of every day. Period! My sidelocks charged with Goex or Pyrodex ( back when I hunted with them ) didn't get discharged at the end of the day, only the cap removal is necessary & making sure the gun does not get put into a drastic temp change to where the barrel will sweat. No big deal! My inlines charged with T7 or BH 209 get loaded before I head into the woods & stay charged until I shoot something. They stay charged the whole deer season essentially. Again, no big deal. 3rd) RCBS makes a handy little C02 bullet/charge dischargee tool so one can use that into the nipple or BP & safely blow their bullet & charge into a towel or teeshirt & reuse the bullet as well as recover most of the reusable powder. 4th) With inlines, the best way to remove your charge is to remove the BP then just push everything out the breech end ( maybe over a tray or something to catch most of your powder. By simply NOT using anti-seize or grease on the BP threads, instead of only using Teflon tape on your BP's threads, you'll easily negate that prob/excuse as well. SIMPLE - RIGHT 5th) A muzzleloader IS NOT the same or same classification as a centerfire weapon. By simply removing the cap or primer, renders that gun 100% UNFIREABLE = a bludgeoning implement & nothing more. The same rules/laws DO NOT APPLY. Hopefully, you can wrap your head around this, bc it won't ever get put more completely, more plainly, & more simply for you anywhere. [/QUOTE]
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