If your gonna shoot CAS yourr gonna need some six shooters, a
rifle and a shotgun. You don't have to get these all at
once because if you show up a your local club you're bound to
find plenty of friendly pards that will be happy to let you
shoot one of their spares.
In my case I got the pistols first and showed up at a match with
my pair of Remmington 1875's. Folks were offering me their
long guns but since I had never shot a lever gun in my life
before and hadn't shot a shotgun in a good 40 years I didn't
want to have that first experience in front of everyone so I
politely passed on the long guns and shot all the stages with
just my pistols. I had a good time and came home without
any extra holes in my body. That was March of 2011 and by
July I attended my second match with my new Uberti 1866 in 45
Colt and a TTN hammered double.
You're going to need lots of accoutrements besides just the guns
but let's start there.
You're going to have to pick your guns partially based on the
class you want to compete in. I chose Frontier Cartridge
Dualist which means black powder cartridges and shotgun shells
and I fire with one hand. The guns also have some bearing
on your speed. I chose an external hammered double which
is slower than a hammerless one which cocks when you open the
breach.
I decided on 45 Colt because that is pretty much the only
caliber I ever heard of as a kid and I am reliving my childhood.
While growing up the most familiar pistol on TV was the Colt
1873 Peacemaker and while I had an Colt 1860 Army toy gun for
most of my childhood in my old age I don't like to be using what
everyone else is using. I looked around for other pistons and
fell in love with the look of the 1875 Remmies. Aren't
they perty? :) They are Uberti's and were purchased at EMF
Company.
Next I needed a rifle. Everyone uses a Winchester 1873 so
that ruled out that rifle. I thought long and hard about
the 1860 Henry but finally settled on the "improved Henry", the
Winchester 1866 Yellow Boy short rifle. Again made by Uberti.
And if you're a smart cowboy you're gonna bring some close in
firepower. I selected a TTN 12ga external hammer double
barrel coach gun. These guns have very good quality at a
reasonable price and the new ones come standard with lightened
springs and a big brass bead on the barrel.
Now you will also need some leather to stick those six shooters
into. I went to
Springfield Slim
for a custom made rig. Slim does some great work and I
fell in love with a Slim Jim holster that I saw he made with
incised tooling rather than the normal stamped. Here's the
rig he made for me. The badge holder on the belt is from
JM Leather.
In addition to the pistol rig I asked Slim to make me some slide
on holders for shotgun and 45 cartridges. Slim
accommodated me and I wore them for a couple of matches but
because I wear my gun belt low the extra bulk made it very
difficult to bend down without popping open a snap or two.
Additionally, because I bought my gun belt with bullet loops
there really wasn't much room to to use the slides. That's
when I contacted
Johnny
at
JM Leather and sent him
a picture of my rig and asked him to try to match the color as
close as he could and make me a shotgun belt.
Below you can see the original slides that I used from
Springfield Slim and the full shotgun belt from JM Leather.
Notice how the shotgun shells are in pairs. This way I can
grab two at a time for loading into my double. You might
ask why one would need so many shotgun shells, all I can say is
that the last stage of the last shoot I attended this year was
all shotgun and required 11 rounds not counting the makeup round
if you missed the birdie. I had a similar stage when I was
using the slide and had to keep 5 shells in my breast
pocket....the next week I ordered the belt.
Now here's what I wear when I go to a match. I do fill up
the bullet loops on the belt as well but I have them removed now
for the off season.
Oh yea, and what self respecting cowboy would show up to a fight
without a knife :)
The two below shooters are cap and ball revolvers and while I
have not brought them to a match yet they will be shot in the
Frontiersman category.
The first pic is of a Uberti Colt 1847 "Walker" revolver and was
given to me by my work mates as a retirement present.
The next two photo's are of the Walker and my 1858 Remington.
Both are 44 caliber though the Remmy as pictured here has a 45
Colt conversion cylinder installed.
Notice how much larger the 4-1/2 pound Walker is. It can
shoot 60 grains of black powder vs about 34 grains for the
Remmy.
RELOADING
I am not going to provide a reloading tutorial
here but rather just show you the equipment I'm using.
As I said above I choose to shoot Frontier Cartridge Dualist
(FCD) and that means loading with Black Powder rather than
Smokeless powder. Black powder or gunpowder as it was
called before the advent of smokeless powder is an explosive and
as such bust be treated with respect. If you don't smoke
and don't have a source of open flame or spark then there isn't
anything too special you have to do to keep safe. It's
probably not a good idea to store 25 pounds of the stuff in your
house but many people keep a couple of pounds near the reloading
bench. There are lots of articles and discussions about
static electricity and black powder, read them and make up your
own mind. If you're going to do a lot of black powder
shooting then you are going to use a lot of powder. There
are about 7000 grains in a pound of powder. At 70 grains
per shot gun load you're going to only get about 100 rounds (4
boxes) per pound. Or in a 45 colt at 38gr you'll get about
185 rounds per pound. You can go through 120 rounds of 45
in a 6 stage match and easily 25-50 shotgun shells. My
last match had one stage which was 12 shells minimum not
counting extras for misses. So bottom line you're going to
need to buy more than a pound at a time. Real black powder
can be had with some economy over buying it from your local gun
shop by purchasing it mail order.
Powder Inc and
Maine Powder House
have very good deals on shipments of 10 pounds. I've
bought GOEX locally but prefer not to shoot it as it is very
dirty and really fouls up my guns quickly. I just tried a
5 pound batch of KIK and I am very impressed with it. I
may also try Schuetzen as it is rated very good for a medium
priced powder. Swiss is supposed to be the best but it is
by far the costliest.
So here's my reloading bench. It is a re-purposed bench
which I also used for my sharpening station (woodworking,
another hobby). In this first pic you can see the single
stage Lee Challenger press on the left and the progressive Lee
Loadmaster press on the right. I started out with the
single stage press, cost about $150 to get set up with the dies
etc. I then moved up to the Lee Progressive press..
With this press I can load much faster and I use it to load all
my 45 Colt cartridges. Just to the left of the Lee
Loadmaster progressive press you see another powder measure with
some white stuff in it. That's the Lee Perfect Powder
Measure and the white stuff is Cream of Wheat. I use CoW
as a filler for my pistol loads. I find that full strength
pistol loads cause the trigger guard to smack into my fingers
and that gets really bothersome after a while so I load 24gr of
black powder (15gr is the minimum load for competition) and fill
the rest of the space with CoW. I can tell you that my
rounds still go BOOM and belch lots of flame and smoke and
nobody I shoot with has any idea that they are not full loads so
don't be afraid to do this because you think you'll be ribbed.
Nobody will know unless you tell them and 24gr is still a pretty
stout load. My rifle rounds get the full load and a tight
crimp.
In this picture the tool at the far right is a bench mortiser
which has nothing to do with reloading. To its left is my
Ebay special MEC 600jr which I use to load my Black Powder
shotgun shells. The tube with the funnel on it is a drop
tube which is used to load my 45/70 rounds for use in my
Winchester model 1885 BPCR rifle.
I will keep this page updated with my progress
-Willy
Main and Gun Cart
Black Powder Cartridge Rifle shooting (BPCR)