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Maybe it was a high wall. Either way, Browning made some Winchester falling block replicas in 25-06. One in 243 rechambered to 6-06 might be even more fun with all of the cool 6mm bullets now on the market, assuming that the twist rate would be appropriate for some of the long, VLD type bullets.1-pointer, that would be an odd duck for sure. Real low walls don't get chambered much beyond .25-20 for those that treasure a long life expectancy, a really "stepping out" cartridge is like a .38-72 (got one), and the buffalo were all dead before the 1885 ever if the fields.
If I wanted a circa 1885-1899 production model what cartridge options would I have?
Definitely sticking to smokeless powder and cartridges I can get dies, bullets, primers and cases for. Looks like I have some interesting homework to do.
Definitely sticking to smokeless powder and cartridges I can get dies, bullets, primers and cases for. Looks like I have some interesting homework to do.
I have never seen a highwall in .303. Note the asterisc behind many of the .30 cal chamberings and some others as well. They are very rare (and maybe a bit dicey. As I recall from reading Campbell years ago, the few .30-06s were made for Wimbledon shooting by the Brits and the one or two that Campbell had inspected personally seemed to be a bit loose as if they were stretching a bit. Even .30 krags are not a dime a dozen. But .38-55s and .45-70s are commmon. You can't beat either of them for good cartridges. I resisted the .45-70 for years and now own 4 or 5 of them.
(made in the last 20 yrs by Browning and then Winchester)
We haven't even got to loading smokeless for black loads.![]()
By "last 20 yrs" do you mean the replicas made since 2005, or do you mean in the last twenty years of original production (circa post-1910)?
Thanks to both Brent and Ben for all this info - I guess I really hadn't thought that much about it other than a distant fascination -- I have some reading and learning to do. At this point my initial thought is that if I am going vintage original I would like to have as few parts updated as realistically possible. I also would like to stay smokeless. Beyond that I am open and am going to do some thinking.
Ben, so far as white for black loads, those are well known for most chamberings as many people do that. I do it sometimes but not often and never in singleshots. But pretty straight forward. As a rule, the really cavernous cases like .45-90s and above, are where it gets the most tricky.
VG, I'll try to talk you into trying smoking powder, lead bullets, and, glory be! paper patches one day. Don't fight it; let it come to you; it's not hard; or scary; just different. And it might totally change your life. For the better. Really.![]()