Anybody have any 32 Crockett Loads

kwhi43

New member
Going down to range tomorrow and try to work up a target load for my little
Traditions Crockett .32 rifle. For a made in Spain the barrel looks very good.
Going to try FFF and FF . Will be using "0" Buck for the ball .323 and .010
patching. These rifles sure look good. Just wanted to see what the rest of
you all use.
Smallfilesize.jpg
 
Off hand, I'd say the .323 ball will be too big to load with a .010 patch. You would probably have better luck with a .310 ball & .005 patch. 35 to 40 grains of fffg is a good starting load.
 
Loading larger powder charges is usually better for hunting varmints and a good accurate round ball load is usually between 20 -30 grains.
The more powder loaded, the more fouling there will be as a result.

I came across these posts on MLF:

Here are some loads and velocities from a .32 TC Cherokee:

10 grains FFFg 1120 FPS equals standard .22 long rifle round
20 grains FFFg 1650 FPS
30 grains FFFg 1870 FPS

My manual advises 20-35gr. max. so I'm hanging at twenty, figure I'll go thru all the patch/ball combos, then go up/down 5 gr. to find the magic bullet so those paper plates are dead meat.
 
I shoot an original in this caliber and us a .310 ball, .008 patch and 30 grains FFFg = 1852 FPS. Fun to shoot the small ones but have to cast balls for anything smaller than the one mentioned plus they are harder to load being so small.
 
And The Winner Is

Tired, just got back from all day of shooting. Well the powder that shot the
best group was FF. Best charge was 40 grs. "0" buck and .015 Teflon Patch.
 
.015 Teflon Patch. ???
There was a previous post where a fella was asking about Poly patches. I think this might be what he was refering to. Can you tell us where you got these so I can relate to them. I think I have shot these and did not care for them. Thanks .. :)


Be Safe !!!
 
Teflon Patching

Teflon is a coating that is put on cotton patching material. You can buy .010
.015 and .020. I used to buy the Teflon from Dupont 35 years ago and spray
it onto the material and sell it. It came into use in the early 70's mebby
eariler in bench rest shooting . It being so slick it lets you load oversize balls
easly. I have used it for over 35 years and will use nothing else. But I am
a match shooter. It would be great for hunting. Each month there is a ad in
"Muzzle Blast" for it. You load it dry, so your powder is always dry. All the top
bench rest shooters use it. You buy it by the yard so you can cut it at the
muzzle, or you can cut square patches or round.
 
From what I've read, the Teflon coating leaves a residue in the bore that must be cleaned between each and every shot.
However, nearly everyone who uses it likes it.
The only problem that I've ever heard about it is if the coating isn't applied evenly and properly, then using it can really become problematic. Especially if it gets over-applied, then the patch material becomes undesirable.
 
What kwhi said,I have been using .10 teflon patch with .440 Hornady round ball in my 45 half stock rifle with 45 grs. FF. Rifle has never been out of the money at any match it was entered.The bore is as bright and shiny as new.
www.theminute-men.com is the source from Muzzle Blast,It's worth a try.
 
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