That logic is how I ended up with 7.If you have 7, what's 8 or 9?????
I could get rid of 4 and never miss them, but the three Knights came from a now deceased friend who used to be a Knight sales rep and got me started muzzleloader hunting.
That logic is how I ended up with 7.If you have 7, what's 8 or 9?????
I looked and looked for a Savage a few years ago and finally gave up as they were as rare as hen's teeth. I need to start another search.I would spend about the same amount on a used Savage ML2 smokeless ML. Once you go smokeless you'll never go back unless smokeless isn't allow in the state you're hunting in. In that case, I'd shoot another ML lol. BP or BP substitutes will never touch my Savage ever lol.
Blackhorn 209 is clean and a really good powder, but scarce as hens teeth has applied to it for the last couple or three years. It’s starting to show back up, but it’s not cost effective to use. Many of the serious muzzleloader enthusiasts I know are going back to Triple 7 due to cost.I looked and looked for a Savage a few years ago and finally gave up as they were as rare as hen's teeth. I need to start another search.
I looked on this link I posted and it recommended Buckhorn 209 powder which I never heard of before. It sounds pretty much like smokeless without being smokeless. Expensive powder though, $70 a half pound.
It will 100% be worth it if you can find one. If not, look at the smokeless conversions like @Oklahomabassin has. If smokeless is legal, there's really no reason not to go that route unless it's cost prohibitive or you're wanting to stay traditional....not including modern inlines.I looked and looked for a Savage a few years ago and finally gave up as they were as rare as hen's teeth. I need to start another search.
I looked on this link I posted and it recommended Buckhorn 209 powder which I never heard of before. It sounds pretty much like smokeless without being smokeless. Expensive powder though, $70 a half pound.
Enter your email address to join: