Yep, I'm new here. Very nice forums you guys have.
I've been interested in picking myself up a decent little cap and ball revolver for a while now. I've been looking for something around $200 (not much of a budget, is it?), probably a .44 or .45 of some sort.
I was looking at the Cabelas website, and saw that they were selling a really nice looking Pietta 1858 New Army .44-Caliber revolver for $199. There was also a nice 1851 Confederate Navy .44-Caliber model that looked pretty nice. Would you recommend either of these, or is there a better model from a different company that costs roughly the same?
Aside from picking the actual gun, I just want to take a minute and make sure I have my basics down. I know it sure sounds like a lot of fun, but I feel like things could go wrong extremely quickly with something like this...
I'll just go from start to finish. When I want to shoot, I'm going to want to put a cap on each of the nipples and fire it to blow out any excess grease. To load, first measure out the FFFG powder (I'd be getting a flask and a separate powder measure) and dump it into five of the cylinders (Cap it first? Seems like you would...); Six if I'm going to shoot immediately after loading. Then, push a .44-45 Caliber Lubed Ox-Yoke Wonder Wad into each of the loaded cylinders, and ram it down. Then, put a .454 (is that what you'd use, or do you prefer .451 or .457?) into the cylinder and ram it onto the wad. I'm not sure about anything special that needs to be done to the bullet though - do you lube the entire ball, do nothing at all to it, or ram it down and then put grease on it? I feel like there would be serious leading if there isn't any lube at all on top of the ball, but maybe a black powder revolver is different than your typical modern handgun... I guess that's why I came here, first.
Other than that, you slightly pinch in the sides of a cap, put it onto the nipple, and you're ready to go. Right? I'm sure I missed some things here and there, but I have exactly zero hours of shooting experience with this.
One last question. Cleaning. I have a general idea of how to clean a BP revolver, but maybe there are a few tricks or tips I haven't heard yet. You need to completely take it down to every last screw, dump everything into a vat of soapy water, and start scrubbing, basically. Then you're going to take everything out, hand-dry it the best you can, and apparently put it in the oven. Wow. Any alternatives to that?... because I'm a little hesitant in putting my recent purchase to bake at 150 degrees for half an hour. Would a hair dryer work for this, maybe? Anyway, once it's completely dry and warmed up, you submerse (do you? Or just wipe?) it in something like Crisco which isn't oil-based to provide rust protection. Reassemble and you're good to go. Or at least that's how I think it goes... once again, I'm just restating my understanding of these things so you professionals can point out the correct way to do it.
Oh, and I forgot. Here's the list of stuff I'll need so far:
.44-Caliber Revolver
FFFG Black Powder
CCI #11 Caps
Nipple Wrench
Ox-Yoke Wonder Wads
Powder Flask
Powder Measure
Loading Stand
Round Balls (.451, 454, or 457?)
...and feel free to add to it, if you see need.
Load of reading there, I know. I just want to make sure I get it right the first time and don't cost myself the $200 of a new gun.
Much appreciated!
-Matt