Saturday, October 10, 2009

Green Mountain's Short & Sweet .54 Brush Rifle


The last time that I was a real fan of the .54 caliber bore was during the early 1980s, when I spent most of the summer to build a very authentic percussion half-stock "Hawken" rifle. And, appropriately, the rifle featured a slow turn-in-66 inches rifling twist - for shooting a patched round ball. The nearly 10-pound rifle, stuffed with 120-grains of FFg black powder and a tightly patched 230-grain .535" diameter soft lead ball, was super accurate and deadly on big game out to about 75 yards.

When I made the switch to Knight's MK-85 in-line ignition rifles, and saboted bullets, during the late 1980s, I pretty much abandoned the .54, going in favor of the .50 bore. I simply found the .50 to be far more accurate, thanks to sabots that allowed me to shoot a bullet that was closer to the diameter of the bore. From time to time, since then, I have played with a few .54 caliber rifles, but always returned to a .50 caliber in-line rifle. And, as it turned out, I wasn't the only one to abandon the .54. From 1992 thru 1997, I headed up Market Development for Knight Rifles. When I first went to work there, close to 30-percent of the rifles produced were of .54 caliber...and about 10 percent were .45 caliber. The 50 caliber bore represented 60-percent of all the rifles the company produced. By the time I left the company, the .50 caliber accounted for right at 90-percent of all Knight rifle sales.

Other in-line muzzleloading rifle manufacturers experienced the same demise of .54 caliber rifle sales. And I now know of just one company that currently offers an in-line ignition rifle in that bore size. And that is Green Mountain Rifle Barrel Company, and the rifle is their short 20-inch barreled "Brush Rifle", a slick custom version of a Knight DISC Extreme.

I have been shooting one since the rifle was first offered. In fact, my rifle is serial number 0001.

And thanks to some improvements in sabot technology and bullet selection, I have truly enojoyed shooting and hunting with this fast handling, hard hitting close cover muzzleloader. The buck in the above photo was taken during the 2008 season, at just 15 or so yards - dropped where it ran - by a big 325-grain Barnes all-copper Expander MZ hollow-point bullet. And recently, I have discovered an even harder hitting load built around Harvester Muzzleloading's saboted 400-grain Hard Cast lead bullet.

More on this short and sweet .54 in-line muzzleloader at -

http://namlhunt.homestead.com/HuntingLoads.html

When Knight Rifles introduced their .52 caliber bore back about 2000, they developed new .52x.458 and .52x.475 sabots for the new bore size, and came up with some new choices for the muzzleloading hunter - with bullets ranging from 275- to 375-grains. Many of those who own...shoot...and hunt with a Knight .52 consider these rifles the finest shooting and hardest hitting big game muzzleloaders ever offered. While I agree that the .52 has been a remarkable shooting and energy retaining long-range big game muzzleloader, I also feel that if the same effort had been spent to come up with more compatible sabots and bullets for the .54, that bore size would still be alive and well today. As great as my .52 DISC Extreme has shot with the saboted 375-grain spitzer .475" diameter hollow point, I can only imagine how well a 26 to 28 inch barreled version of the same rifle in .54 would shoot had there been a .54x.475 sabot available.

Barnes makes the bullet...and offers saboted bullets for the .54. With easily 200,000 to 300,000 .54 rifles still out there, you would think that someone would at least make an attempt to revive the bore size. And that would start with several new sabot-bullet combinations.

Toby Bridges
NORTH AMERICAN
MUZZLELOADER HUNTING

5 comments:

  1. Toby,

    That rifle and load combination looks like a winner for some hunting areas, but since I often hunt Oregon and Colorado I will probably stick with my other rifles. I have a hunting friend who mostly shoots .58s (he has a flock of those), but his commentary on the effectiveness .451" heavy conicals sounds like a commercial.

    good hunting...jim

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  2. Jim;

    Your friend knows his stuff then. Those long and heavy conical bullets, developed right here in the good ol' U.S. during the 1840s, maintain velocity and energy well out to 200 yards. Most of these bullets, for a .45 bore, weighed 300 to 500 grains - and once they got rolling along (at 1,300 to 1,500 f.p.s.), they kept on rolling along.

    It was that effectiveness, and improved accuracy at longer ranges, which in turn prompted the refinement of the telescopic rifle sight - a.k.a. riflescope. And when topped with a scope of 3x, 6x,or even 12x magnification, the muzzle-loaded rifles of the late 1840s and through the 1850s were very effective 200-yard-plus big game rifles. The .45 tended to be the favored bore size. And with bullets as heavy as 500 grains, they still delivered quite a wallop. There were very few fast-twist rifling bullet rifles of that period in .50 caliber.

    Toby

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  3. That Green Mountain Rifle looks like the perfect southern New England deer rifle. Here in Massachusetts,Rhode Island, as well as state land in Connecticut it is shotgun or muzzleloader only for deer.

    Most of the time you will only get one shot anyways so you aren't all that limited. In addition most of the shots are going to be well under 100 yards but on some occasions you can get something a tad further but they are rare.

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  4. John;

    It is one of the fastest handling muzzleloaders I have ever shot and hunted with. The .54 Brush Rifle is an ideal close to medium range big game rifle. While it is really at home when hunting the "thick stuff" where shots will be 30 to 50 yards...I would have absolutely no qualms about taking a shot out to 100 yards.

    Toby

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  5. Awesome picture is that your gun its so beautiful.
    Welcome to Centex HuntClub Hog Hunting

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