In your magazine racks now... Rifle Magazine Jan 2005 issue. Mike Venturino has another great artical on accuracy and BPCR. The 3 rifles that he uses are C. Sharps 44-90, C. Sharps 45-70 and Shiloh Sharps 45-70
In the artical you will see why he shot the pants off of his friends 300 Weatherby Mag at 200 yards using a 125 yr old 45-70 rifle with black powder loads.
Now getting back to our discussion, I just had to throw that in there so you will go out and get the magazine.
Deadeye47, I have seen Steve Garb who was on national TV with his 45-110 Sharps do this at 1200 yards. He was being filmed for the show, and well in front of millions I suppose who watch it as well. Your black powder cartridge loads do not have to be super charged so that they are going 1800 FPS or faster to reach out and touch something. Heck a 45-70 BPC can and did reach 2 miles during the
Sandy Hook test of 1879 and you can read just how much penitration it had at the other end. The 500-gr bullet mentioned in the artical would have been the 500-gr 1881 Govt design as it was later called becuase of the test.
Handirifle brings up good points about two factors that could cause the tang mount Soule sight to become questionable on the Buffalo Classic. Well the ejection problem can be fixed to make them extract instead of poping out when ejected.
Ejector Modification for the Tip Up Rifle is a real easy way to fix this. The other potentual problem of wear on the hinge is another, but just how long this wear would take is anyones guess. But if you had wear from tipping or opening the breech break the barrel as we have to for reloading and shooting each round fired, can you be assured of a 100% return to zero each and every time.... only time will tell. Another question raised is the brazed tang option... this would make it more in line with the design of the 1884 Wurfflein Breech Loading Rifle pictured here.
But if the 1884 Wurfflein had no problems with this, I don't know if the Buffalo Classic will either.
Now getting onto what black powders (not substitute powders like Pyrodex) are used or do I want to use? This is a good viable question here since now we have Elephant, Goex, Kick, Swiss and Schuetzen powders. When I can't get my hands on Goex FFg I use Elephant, just my call. Those in BPCR are using Swiss but it is more costly to use. But getting back to what I use, Goex FFg and usually purchase 4 pounds from the same lot number. This way the fines are consistant with each can or pound that I get, because it changes from lot to lot number.
As I have stressed
consistancy is your key word, and even when I use my drop tube while pouring the powder down the tube, I trickel it in ever so slowly so I have a uniform compaction in the shell casing. Some ask, "Well is this really necessary?" I believe it is, simply because of the consistancy of each load developed. Do the experiment and you will see for yourself.
Take a 45-70 case and just fill it to the top with BP, then slowly trickel that powder down the drop tube so that the powder settles into another case and you will see the differance. You might ask yourself then, "How does it do that?" well each grain of powder is finding its place like jigsaw puzzle peices fitting together. When a muzzleloader is pouring his charge of BP down the barrel it usually has some 24" to 32" to fall and settle into place, and this is why the drop tube method came about as it is my understanding.
Guy's you won't find names like Kenny Wasserburger National Champion BPCR shooter, or Steve Garb also National Champion BPCR shooter and so on here defending the Buffalo Classic or even advocating its use, because they flat out will not touch a H&R 1871 product, they own C. Sharps, Shiloh Sharps and Ballards and the like and do not consider the Wesson & Harrington 1871 Buffalo Classic 45-70 a BPCR gun...... but it is. Its just like a BMW or Jag owner looking down their noses at a Chevy, Dodge or Ford 4x4 owner.
Well the Wesson & Harrington 1871 Buffalo Classic 45-70 has merit and I feel it deserves very good credit becuase it does perform and the only limit one puts on it, is his own.
Sight them up and shoot them to your standard, but just don't let your standard, stand in the way of you making your Buffalo Classic shoot its best. Many have been amazed at the 500 yard and farther long range match where the Buffalo Classic was used, that its shooter walked away with a win. Simply because he/she had it sighted up, and their loads were consistant.
BPCR loading is a learning curve, don't rush your loading development, but the 45-70 cartridge is the easiest to learn by. You can go to my website at
http://The_Montanan.tripod.com I have been making some changes and additions to information for each of you, as well as anyone who stroles in. I hope it helps.
I hope to someday soon to have a linked page dedicated to just Wesson & Harrington 1871 Buffalo Classic rifles in differant configurations and calibers. I already know of one guy who had a barrel made in 40-65 and 50-70 and like Shiloh Sharps has, a Trophy Room dedicated to Buffalo Classic hunters ONLY. That is game taken with just.. you guessed it the Wesson & Harrington 1871 Buffalo Classic or Target Model.