It's one thing to be strange, it's something else to open your mouth and let everybody know that you're strange.
I've become involved in an unusual target sport.
I shoot Schuetzen.
This is a target sport that harkens back to the time between the Civil War and WWI. It involves the use of single-shot rifles (antique and modern) and plain-base (no gas check) cast-lead bullets. Calibers might range from the diminutive 25-20 to the venerable 45-70 with the bulk of the cartridges in the .30 to .38 caliber range. Match winners are usually the shooting a .32 Miller Short (MS) or .32-40 Winchester. -If you have an Accurate Reloading Manual, or can look at one, flip to the very back section under Schuetzen Loadings. We Schuetophiles do get some occasional press.-
Bullets, which are typically tapered, are breech-seated. This means the bullet starts it's path down the tube from a jammed into the rifling just ahead of the chamber position. Bullets and brass do not touch. Dies for sizing brass are never used. If the cartridge comes out of the chamber, it will go back in. I have pieces of brass that I have used exclusively at 100 shot matches for several years. The primer pockets will wear out (from de/re-capping) after about 1000 shots give or take a couple hundred. The appeal of this sport was the low cost of shooting.
I buy my lead at a plumbing shop for 93 cents a pound, and I mix it with bar solder to get an easy to work with alloy.
I bought a Falling Block Works rifle chambered in .32MS to start and I've won/placed at most of the matches I've attended. I'm currently having a heavy bbl (1.25" OD bbl) Ruger #3 (also .32MS) built for me. This will have a sawed forearm hanger, and a machined block to act as the fill-in piece for the mainspring support... -but that's a whole 'nother article.
Why do I post here??!!
I love my Handi!!! After some non-competitive attempts to make a .357 Mag perform (rifle too light, bullet selection not great), I'm building a 32-40 Winchester rifle. I've gleaned a lot of info here as a pseudo-lurker, as well as grabbing a couple of articles from the net and my Single Shot Rifle Journal archive master.
I'll be sending my rifle in to NEF for a 30-30 bbl fitting, trigger job and ejector/extractor conversion job (if they don't do it, I will) in the beginning of August. I will then have the proper extractor and a future barrel stub for my project. I will be ordering an unturned barrel blank from Shilen (.32 cal) and turning it down to the same diameter as the chamber area of the Handi, and 28" long -i.e. no taper. This rifle will be able to use both aperture and scope sights. The cost will still be fairly low compared to buying and modifying any other SS action to be competitive. I also have a ton of tapered 32cal bullet moulds to try.
So far I've completed the breech-seating design portion. I have a metal working shaper, so I've made the front and rear sight/scope rail (from 1/2" barstock 1018CR) which overhangs the back of the barrel and will have a groove cut into it to accept the seating tool. I'll make the tool itself from 1144 roundstock on my lathe. It will be a cam-type affair, the final dimensions and appearance of which will make themselves apparent as the shavings spool off.
I don't know if anybody cares about my project but me, but I will try to figure out how to post pictures when I've completed each step. I'm still new to this machining thing, so my wife's grandfather (retired tool-room machinist) will help me with the more challenging portions.
The photos that I do post will show all items "in the white", and I will try to drop in a few pictures of the finished rifle and tools when I have had everything blued.
I'm quite excited about this humble project. I look forward to being able to get into my garage to work on it, when it is not 90-95 degrees...
Later,
(not in the bars at night) :grin:
Dean