Carried a old break top Forehand chambered in .38 S&W to the range today. Bought it for $20 a few weeks ago and after having it checked and testfired by a smith I figured it was time to shoot it a few times.
The ammunition I had for it was old Remington stuff that I bought at a gunshow a while back spicifically to shoot through this gun once I was sure it was safe. Paid $10 for a box of 50. All Remingtons but two different head stamps.
So I load the old pistol up and start pulling the trigger. Much to my surprise it starts belching blue smoke! Three of the first five rounds blew blue, one was obviously smokeless and one was a dud.
Ran the rest of them through the gun after taking note of the different headstamps and segreating out the smokeless. Of the 40 or so black powder rounds 5 or 6 would not fire even with repeated hits of the firing pin.
All the smokless fired fine.
Interesting thing. After about 20 of the black powder rounds the darn thing got VERY hard to cycle. Had to break out some cleaner and oil to get her running right again. That gave me some indication of how hard it must have been to fight a war with black powder weapons.
So my question is......how old do you think that Remington black powder .38 S&W ammunition was?
The ammunition I had for it was old Remington stuff that I bought at a gunshow a while back spicifically to shoot through this gun once I was sure it was safe. Paid $10 for a box of 50. All Remingtons but two different head stamps.
So I load the old pistol up and start pulling the trigger. Much to my surprise it starts belching blue smoke! Three of the first five rounds blew blue, one was obviously smokeless and one was a dud.
Ran the rest of them through the gun after taking note of the different headstamps and segreating out the smokeless. Of the 40 or so black powder rounds 5 or 6 would not fire even with repeated hits of the firing pin.
All the smokless fired fine.
Interesting thing. After about 20 of the black powder rounds the darn thing got VERY hard to cycle. Had to break out some cleaner and oil to get her running right again. That gave me some indication of how hard it must have been to fight a war with black powder weapons.
So my question is......how old do you think that Remington black powder .38 S&W ammunition was?