This was the first time I ever fired a muzzleloader. I enjoyed shooting it more than my cartridge rifles. I did not fire a primer off before loading and it did not fire the first time. Put another primer in and it fired. After that I fired off a primer before loading everytime and had no problems. I swabbed with alcohol between shots. I only shot at 25 yards to get it roughly dialed in and get the feel of the gun. suprisingly it kicked no more than a 410 shotgun. I was shooting 44/50 cal 240 grain xtp's and 45/50 cal 200 grain shockwaves using 100 grains of pyrodex pellets and 777 primers. Even at 25 yards I can see my genesis prefered the shockwaves. Trigger was light and crisp and the recoil pad is excellent. Had to wipe it down between shots or the cam would get stuck but I was told that in advance so no problems. I wish the sights were a little finer for more precise aiming but I decided I will be getting a scope so it's not a big deal. I can see this gun easily being a 100 yard weapon for me. It will be interesting to play with loose powder and more types of bullets in the future. Thanks for all the help and answering all my newbie questions, Brad
My lab ate my tv remote so I need to go there anyway.
Too many TV remotes aren't good for dogs. You should try to limit him to just one every two weeks or so.
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My wife says I'm totally nuts, but I think I'm Semisane.
Things I've Learned: (1) It's not possible to please everyone, but quite easy to piss everyone off. (2) If you love animals as I do, then you're not a vegetarian. (3) There's no need to act stupid, even if you're very good at it. (4) If you eat right and exercise, don't smoke or drink, you're going to die anyway.
The trick to making them shoot is fire off that primer before the FIRST shot. That's to clear the breech plug. After that you swab with a damp and then a couple dry patches, no need to fire a primer off, load your powder and sabot, and then a primer and fire.
I agree on the sights.. that's why I went to a 1x32mm scope. It makes shooting a LOT more accurate for me.
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"Life should NOT be a journey to the grave with the intention of arriving safely in an attractive and well preserved body, but rather to skid in sideways, a total wreck, screaming Yahoo, with a big smile on your face."
Well like Cayugad said, you only have to snap a primer off before your shooting session. Welcome to the wonderful world of muzzleloading. Hope your rilfe works well for you. Just keep it clean.
__________________ PLEASE NOTE THAT DUE TO THE RISING COST IN AMMO PRICES I WILL NO LONGER BE FIRING A WARNING SHOT.
A government big enough to give you everything you want is big enough to take away everything you have.
I'm not as good as I'm gonna get - but I'm better than I used to be. "Life without God is like an unsharpened pencil - it has no point."
One thing I take to the range is Q-tips and rubbing alcohol. If the primer port start to get hard to seat or remove, wet a Q-tip and poke it in that primer pocket and scrub that clean. Then wipe out all the small hard to reach places. Use the other end to dry the area.. This will help the primers fall right out of the breech plug after you shoot.
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"Life should NOT be a journey to the grave with the intention of arriving safely in an attractive and well preserved body, but rather to skid in sideways, a total wreck, screaming Yahoo, with a big smile on your face."
Good tip Cayugad. I do that too. I also bring a small hand towel. During the summer I bring two, one for dirty hands and one for the sweaty face.
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My wife says I'm totally nuts, but I think I'm Semisane.
Things I've Learned: (1) It's not possible to please everyone, but quite easy to piss everyone off. (2) If you love animals as I do, then you're not a vegetarian. (3) There's no need to act stupid, even if you're very good at it. (4) If you eat right and exercise, don't smoke or drink, you're going to die anyway.
The trick to making them shoot is fire off that primer before the FIRST shot. That's to clear the breech plug. After that you swab with a damp and then a couple dry patches, no need to fire a primer off, load your powder and sabot, and then a primer and fire.
I agree on the sights.. that's why I went to a 1x32mm scope. It makes shooting a LOT more accurate for me.
Oh ok, that will save me some primers. I'll definitely find a way to fire a primer off before a hunt. I was suprised at how easily the barrel cleaned up with soapy water.