Dear Guys,
At the last few gunshows I've been to, I've seen the nice reproduction .50-90 Sharps rifles, and one of the Winchester 1885's made by Miruko in .50-95. In researching these on the net, I see folks saying time and time again that the recoil of these rifles is "punishing," "unacceptable," or "brutal."
OK, so here is what I don't understand. Almost every muzzleloader hunter I know (myself included), can easily sit at a bench in an afternoon and fire 25 to 50 rounds through their .50 caliber Hawken etc., using a 90 grain load, with no real ill effects. I'm not saying there's no recoil, but nobody I know would call it brutal or unacceptable. Heck, its almost impossible to find anyone who uses less than 90 grains in their hunting loads anymore.
So, what gives? Are the people who are posting these comments primarily long range target shooters (600 yards etc.), who are use to shooting .45-70s etc? I note that companies like Shiloh Sharps don't make the .50 caliber pieces, except for special order.
Or, is there something fundamentally different about shooting 90 grains of blackpowder in a cartridge, instead of loose packed in a muzzleloader, that creates more felt recoil?
Thanks for any info.
Mannyrock