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Jackalope

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Everything posted by Jackalope

  1. I am, too!
  2. I use a Lee factory crimp die for 44-40. Since it's a bottle neck cartridge, the crimp die doesn't have the sizing ring you mention. Occasionally, a 44-40 cartridge will bulge a little bit after loading and crimping. I find these at my loading bench with a chamber checker instead of at the loading table at a match. YMMV Regards, Jackalope
  3. It is true. I have witnessed this. 🤠
  4. Sorry to be a spoiler, Griff, but mine works with anything I've tried, including acorns from a wrist rocket.
  5. Mine works great. I've not tried anything bigger than 45-70, but it sees through the cloud just fine.
  6. I use Microsoft Power Point for target layout and shooting instructions. I would never be confused with a real graphics designer, but they seem to get the message across clearly. I generally include a story that culminates in a gunfight. For example, Jake stepped into his bedroom and found his wife in bed with his friend Tom. Jake hollered, “What the hell do you think you’re doing?” His wife turned to Tom and said, “See, I told you he was stupid.” That's what started the gunfight.
  7. It kinda looks that way, doesn't it? As match director for our local club, I'll write the stages (most often with a short "...that's what started the gunfight" story) a few weeks prior to our match. I'll review and tweak them and, eventually, my bride, Anita Margarita, will proof-read them and we'll adjust the stages as needed. We set up the steel on the Sunday prior to our regularly scheduled Saturday match. Using the same target positions, Anita will write stages for a Tuesday match. If anything is still wonky, we can make whatever adjustments might be needed for Saturday. Somehow, we always make time for a walk-through prior to our safety meeting, etc. There are rarely any questions but we walk it through anyway because I'm unwilling to have one posse shoot a different match than the other. I don't really think the readers are impaired as much as the phrase, "at the ready" is ambiguous. If your author insists on such language, perhaps you could help with some constructive suggestions regarding clarity.
  8. Maybe not in Nevada, but they do around here. If you have more than one posse, why in the world would you not have a walk-through (or similar)?
  9. If you don't find contact info for the maker or if they can't help you out... Check Amazon for AJ Tack Black Jingle Bobs. I purchased some of them recently. AJ Tack also carries rowels. Maybe you can find a suitable replacement there. Good luck...
  10. Sedalia Dave askes a good question. Since I came into possession of a 20-inch .357 rifle, I've been wondering about it myself. I've been considering the Accurate 36-155C, mostly due to the nose length. T Bone, it looks like the measurements you listed for lube grooves are the width of the groove. Have you determined the volume of the grooves?
  11. Imis, I went directly to the source with a similar question. The contact info on their reply email is: From: Federal Contact Us <cs@email.federalpremium.com> Sent: Saturday, March 25, 2023 11:41 AM To: Federal Ammunition Product Service <Anoka.Prodserv@VistaOutdoor.com> Subject: Federal Ammunition Contact Us – Technical Services/Quality
  12. We discovered the same thing at Oak Ridge today. We had to resort to using paper! Oh, the horror! I don't know anything more about the software deal but it was fortunate we had a bunch of left over paper score sheets from years gone by.
  13. 🙄 I've often heard the rational for this is to "preserve a clean match". In reality, the bonus target (hit or miss) is still a five second target, the same value as any other target on the stage and the only impact it has is complicating the scoring process. As much as I hate to disagree with Scarlett, I'm with Creeker on this!
  14. I'm beginning to think Colorado Coffinmaker is on to something. If I should ever try traditional-style shooting again, I would seriously consider shooting my left gun left-handed and the right gun right-handed just to eliminate a time-eating process of handing a gun over and back. It seems it would also provide some flexibility regarding transitions and direction of movement. You have plenty of experience using both hands gunfighter-style so this might be something worth trying.
  15. If there is enough threaded end protruding, you might be able to cut a screwdriver slot in it with a Dremel cutoff wheel. Or, drill a tiny hole in one end of the broken screw and try a very small Easy Out.
  16. Thanks for the suggestions, everyone. And thanks for your offer, Mister Badly. I placed an order today, but depending on the delivery schedule, I might give you a call!
  17. Before I made the original post, I did a search for Justified (to the best of my limited ability) and could not find any contact info.
  18. Jackalope

    Lead Shot

    Since SHOOTIN FOX is no longer making shot, does anyone have contact info for a new source? Thanks, Jackalope
  19. I don't often buy bullets, but when I do, I prefer to get them unsized and unlubricated. I'll lube them with home-made BP grease for BP ammo or crayon wax for smokeless, as needed. Your milage and situation will probably vary. I've been using nothing but black powder for cowboy shooting for the last 15 years or so. My first consideration regarding bullets is if it will carry enough grease for a 24 inch rifle barrel. (I don't worry too much about bullets for my handguns. I've used BP lube, wax lube, no lube...not a lot of difference in my experience.) Recoil, if it's an issue, can be managed with reduced loads. In my opinion, the Accurate 45-195B looks good.
  20. I'm with Blackwater. I'm not a Bond fan. I have an American Derringer in .357 Magnum. Three grains of Bullseye and a 125 grain lead bullet showed a velocity of 546 fps. I would not rely on it for prairie dogs much farther than arms reach, nor would I try to take a Cape Buffalo with it. On the other hand, it's a hoot with 21 grains of FFFg and a 158 grain bullet...a real crowd pleaser!
  21. When AM shoots .38s, the load is a 125 gr bullet and 3.0 grains of Bullseye. Velocity from a 4 5/8 inch Ruger was 711 fps.
  22. My intent was not to incite a riot here. The only point I was going for was a semantical comment, specifically regarding the exact moment the "P" was earned. According the posted stage instructions: It's safe to say that loading more than one round did not cause the "P". Firing more than one round was not prohibited, either, (shotgun ammo round count was 2+ and had the shooter discharged the second shot into the berm, it would have been a no-call), so that did not cause the "P". What caused the "P" was knocking down the second target out of order. That's where the stage instruction was violated. Agree with "P" call...followed by a reshoot due to impeding the shooter's progress after the fact.
  23. OP stage instructions state: Am I to understand that just because the shooter... ...caused the "P"? There was nothing in the OP instructions that would have prevented the shooter from firing more than one shot. For example, if the first shot did not knock anything down, the shooter would have been allowed to reengage. It seems that you imply a second shot caused the "P", but, based on the info provided, it doesn't really look like that was prohibited. Wouldn't it be more accurate to say that the hit which knocked down the second target caused the "P"?
  24. A strange circumstance of a hit (knocking down the second shotgun target) resulting in a P. Not something that happens everyday.
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