Who are you to think I should ever reveal the name of any person to you? You simply dont have that power and its none of anyones business. How do you presume to know his state of mind? Only he knows what he saw in the days and weeks before he spoke to me. He sounded genuinely concerned. All that matters is that the person I spoke with was an employee who was advising a newcomer to blackpowder. His advice was consistent with their manual. His empahsis was certainly a bit over the top, but consistent with the typical conflict that inevitably exists within many companies between management, marketing and the production floor/repair department. Marketing is going to push for higher and higher performance to keep up with competition. The guys who get to see all this owner abuse is going to be a bit more cautious than management and engineering. The more I learn about BP the more cautious I become with it as well. So, given the level of owner abuse the product receives, I can only imagine how cautious the production floor guy must be. I was shooting a 54 not a 45, whole different ballgame. I have never to this day shot a maximum load since that man set me straight. I stick strictly with recommended laods and I believe that T/C is correct in their advice.
I have personally seen almost unbelievable customer abuse on T/C guns an it only gets worse with store clerks selling powders and projectiles suitable for an inline mangnum to owners of caplocks. I have literally seen a man hammering a sabot down the barrel of a 50 Hawken with a 5 pound maul. I have stopped guys from trying to load magnum loads into these guns, which we all know they are unsuitable for. I have seen guys about to shoot a stuck bullet out of a barrel, stuck about halfway down, and stopped them. Given the level of abuse and ignorance I have personally seen it would be one of the worlds greatest wonders if a burst/rupture hasnt happened. If it has never happend, then they have truly have created an idiot proof gun. Guys seem to think that they can load traditional caplocks up like magnums, becuase that is what they are used to or heard about. The best gun for these guys that I have seen is the Omega, which is sweet and simple and reliable. When these guys have a mess up, they can simply unscrew the breech plug.
The only thing I shoot these days is black powder, primarily out of Civil War muskets, which are a whole different ballgame from T/C caplocks. T/C guns operate at about 3 times the chamber pressure of Civil War guns. This and the accidnets I have seen and heard about on the firing line make me all the more cautious, and I am constantly being corrected by other shooters. Again, the more and more I learn, the more cautious I become. There are guys who have been shooting these guns a lot longer than I who teach me all the time, and they had to unteach some things written in the T/C manual, which is inconsstent with a gun being rapid fired with minnies.
If I called you up (as a new shooter) and asked you to fix the stock of my rifle, because it split on the 20th round out of a 54, you might become a bit alarmed as the tech did so long ago. As I recall, the model I was shooting deveoped a reputation for splitting stocks in 54 with maximum loads, possibly the factor influencing T/Cs decision to switch to synthetic stocks after their fire. His advice was sound and I follow it to this day when dealing with T/C rifles. I also bear it in mine when dealing with my Civil War rifles, which have not tech to speak to other than your teammates. Given the fact that I have followed his advice for over 20 years, I truly believe that he did an excellent job of representing his employers best interest as well as my best interest. I dont believe that anyone now or then is or was trying to underime T/C, whom I believe to be the best in the business. In fact, I have a safe full of their guns and if I didnt believe in them, I wouldnt have so many.
You can rest assured that the technical representatives words were as I quoted them. I have never forgotten them and I follow his advice to stick with "recommended loads".