Ruby Report post Posted July 23 Hi Everyone, My Dad won a CVA Accura LR-X .50 cal muzzleloader at the RMEF banquet this last weekend. This is the first muzzleloader either of us have owned or will have ever shot. I was curious what people recommend with in terms of primers, chargers, bullets etc. We are really novices at this so any info is greatly appreciated. Thank you in advance. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
desertmafia21 Report post Posted July 23 YouTube is your best friend. I borrowed buddy’s paramount 2 years ago. Shot it 6 times to zero a new scope and killed a buck with it at 220 yards. Blackhorn is the favorite for long range muzzleloading. Good luck and have fun! 2 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Uplander8003 Report post Posted July 23 I shoot a CVA Optima and I highly recommend blackhorn 209 if you can find/afford it. If you do you the blackhorn you will need to change out the breech plug and find magnum 209 primers. I use the all copper Thor bullets and am very happy with their accuracy and terminal performance. Try muzzle-loaders.com for most of your needs. You can call them and their customer service is very good and will help walk you through what you need. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Crazymonkey Report post Posted July 23 As stated blackhorn 209 is the powder of choice. It's best to weigh out the powder charges as the lines on the plastic tubes are not accurate. There is a chart for how much blackhorn by weight you can run . Blackhorn usually has it online. Any of the pellets are corrosive and require cleaning after use and specific black powder only cleaner. Blackhorn is different and standard gun cleaner can be used.209 shotgun primers are usually what make them work .Then just the bullet of your choice. Muzzleloaders. Com has everything you're gonna need. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Mike26 Report post Posted July 23 I still use 100 grains of Triple Seven, 209 primers and Barnes TEZ. The rest of the group might not agree but its worked for me. 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
NOTAGS Report post Posted July 23 31 minutes ago, Mike26 said: I still use 100 grains of Triple Seven, 209 primers and Barnes TEZ. The rest of the group might not agree but its worked for me. Plus one. EZ with the pellets, and shoots lights out in my Knight 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Hunterjohnny Report post Posted July 23 59 minutes ago, Mike26 said: I still use 100 grains of Triple Seven, 209 primers and Barnes TEZ. The rest of the group might not agree but its worked for me. Solid choices. I'm probably in the minority because is still use the real black powder Goex FFG, just feel I get more out of it. And Hornady SST's 250gr have been good also. 2 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
thegunsmith2506 Report post Posted July 23 36 minutes ago, Hunterjohnny said: Solid choices. I'm probably in the minority because is still use the real black powder Goex FFG, just feel I get more out of it. And Hornady SST's 250gr have been good also. SST's have worked great for us on elk Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Uplander8003 Report post Posted July 23 I've used and taken animals with pellets and it is definitely easier to get started using them. The big advantage though to Blackhorn though, is how much cleaner and less corrosive it is than the pelletized white hots or 777. Of course, nothing wrong with them, just might require more cleaning between shots at the range which can get annoying. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Uplander8003 Report post Posted July 23 Also, don't forget that if you go with Blackhorn, you will have to switch out your breech plug. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
yotebuster Report post Posted July 23 777 will shoot fine if you can mimic the same exact sequence in the field that you do at the range. Shoot, run a patch, shoot etc. The problem is, the second you let it ride around in the truck and in and out of camper etc with humidity and temp changes it goes to heck. The fouling takes on moisture from the air and the crud ring it leaves will shred your sabots different then at the range and it’ll shoot different. Blackhorn mitigates a lot of that by being oil rather then water based 2 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Ruby Report post Posted July 23 Thank you everyone for the information, this gives us a good starting point to look at. I really appreciate it. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
UggRedBilly Report post Posted July 24 10 hours ago, Mike26 said: I still use 100 grains of Triple Seven, 209 primers and Barnes TEZ. The rest of the group might not agree but its worked for me. I use the same setup. But I use BH 209 powder. For better consistency measure your powder with weight instead of volume. I also perfer 209 because it cleans much easier! I use only 80 grains of weighed powder for each charge too! Shoots great! Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
yotebuster Report post Posted July 24 1 hour ago, UggRedBilly said: I use the same setup. But I use BH 209 powder. For better consistency measure your powder with weight instead of volume. I also perfer 209 because it cleans much easier! I use only 80 grains of weighed powder for each charge too! Shoots great! 80 grains by weight of BH209 is a very stout load for mose traditional (non magnum) Muzzleloaders. If it’s a Remington ultimate or one of the Paramounts you can go above that but most of them that’s a pretty heavy load. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Crazymonkey Report post Posted July 24 3 hours ago, yotebuster said: 80 grains by weight of BH209 is a very stout load for mose traditional (non magnum) Muzzleloaders. If it’s a Remington ultimate or one of the Paramounts you can go above that but most of them that’s a pretty heavy load. 84gr by weight is max for a magnum rated 50 cal . My paramount pro in 45cal shoots 112 gr by weight . I think 95 was what the book has as low for them . It's still shocking how much just a few extra grains of powder really changes a muzzleloader recoil. 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites