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View Full Version : 1864 Springfield/lube job?


Mark Daiute
05-30-2009, 03:18 PM
I just picked up a cut down Springfield Rifle Musket for 60 bucks. Excellent bore, everything else was nice except for the poor rifle getting cut down. After replacing the front site I have $100.00 in the rifle. I rubbed Lyman's "Black Gold" lube into the cannalures and shot a half dozen rounds. All indications are that this will be a fun rifle to shoot as well as a deadly weapon to hunt with. I've been shooting muskets for thirty years. The minnieball/rifle is a new animal to me.

How do you rifled musket shooters lube your minnieballs?

Thanks,

Mark

Teleoceras
05-30-2009, 06:51 PM
Mark:

I just picked up a cut down Springfield Rifle Musket for 60 bucks. Excellent bore, everything else was nice except for the poor rifle getting cut down. After replacing the front site I have $100.00 in the rifle. I rubbed Lyman's "Black Gold" lube into the cannalures and shot a half dozen rounds. All indications are that this will be a fun rifle to shoot as well as a deadly weapon to hunt with. I've been shooting muskets for thirty years. The minnieball/rifle is a new animal to me.

How do you rifled musket shooters lube your minnieballs?


I use SPR lube on my Minies. I've had pretty good results with it with my Parker Hale P53 Enfield. I had used wonderlube originally, but that stuff was a bit messy during the Summer. SPR is sold in sticks that can be quickly rubbed into the grooves of the Minies.

http://teleoceras.webs.com/Guns/BP08.jpg
http://teleoceras.webs.com/Guns/En1.jpg

MEHavey
06-02-2009, 09:22 PM
NSSA here:

1 part Lyman Alox (salami-sliced from their usual Lubrisizer/hollow tubes of the stuff at gun shops.)
1 part Beeswax (get at block of it at bigger arts`n craft/hobby stores.)
4 parts Crisco.
(Alternately 1 part 50/50 Alox/Beeswax from a lubrizer tube + 2 part Crisco)
http://www.midwayusa.com/viewProduct/?productNumber=632694
Melt together in a 1 cup metal measuring cup on the stove until "just" liquid.
(After that, just leave it in the cup/thow it into the fridge `til the next time -- keeps forever.)

Ring up and get some QuickLoad tubes in .577 from these guys
540 888-3595 Winchester Sutler Page for Civil War reenactors to safely learn to load and shoot and cleaning your civil war musket and/or revolver (http://cwsutler.hypermart.net/ShotLoad.html#QCTube)

Pour 50-60gr of 2F black into the tube, insert the Minnie ball into the tube upside down to where the grease grooves are all that show, then dunk the bullet/grease grooves into the melted lube and set aside on a pieplate to cool/solidify.

Pull the bullet with your teeth; pour the powder into the muzzle from the tube/drop it to the ground; insert bullet and ram home. Nothing simpler.

You got yourself everything needed to go have a good (and messy) time.
(And your house always smells like beeswax):beerchug:

Matt Wolff
06-03-2009, 02:56 PM
Ive always used bore butter, but is horrible on warm days as it turns to liquid. BP fun to shoot, but hands and around mouth can be black as night by time your done (I roll civilwar era type cartridges)

threepdr
06-11-2009, 09:33 AM
I'm also a NSSA shooter. I use a homemade concoction of 3 parts beef tallow to one part bees wax. Very similar to the wartime recipie and it works great.

I bought some beef suet from the butcher, rendered it down and poured it through a tea strainer to get the solids out then melted the bees wax in it. After it had cooled a bit I poured it into paper cupcake holders in a cupcake pan and let them harden up. I think I have enought to last about 5 years now. I store the cakes in the freezer util needed.

To lube the bullet I just remelt a little and dip the grooved end of the bullet in it.

The loading tubes mentioned before work great. One note, if you are making loads for hunting, put the bullet in base first. That will protect the lube in the grooves and keep stuff from sticking to it. For target work, load point down. Faster to get the bullet out, but you don;t have to worry as much about trash sticking to your lube.