Hurley's Gold

Civil War conicals in the 1860 Colt

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  • Swedonia

    Active Member
    TGT Supporter
    May 8, 2023
    221
    46
    Sweetwater, TX
    I had a chance to shoot a group each with the Eras Gone Johnston and Dow and the Eras Gone Kerr in my Uberti 1860 fluted-cylinder .44 this afternoon. I had hand-lubed them by rubbing an SPG clone into the lube grooves -- only one on the Johnston and Dow. The latter bullet was pretty fiddly to get into the cylinder mouth because of its longer nose, and I had to be careful to keep that nose below the mouth of each chamber. The stubby little Kerr was much easier to handle and seat. I fired the groups from 25 yards rest over my chronograph. The load consisted of 22 grains by weight of Triple 7 FFF, sparked by ancient CCI No. 11 caps given a pinch to stay on the nipples. Oddly, the Kerr, just two grains lighter than the Johnston and Dow at 226 grains, gave a higher average velocity of 826 fps than the J&D at 801 fps. But the Kerr also gave me a five-inch-plus group vs. the 2 3/4-inch group yielded by the J&D. Both groups were about 11-12 inches above the point of aim -- common in my experience with the Colt open tops.
    I'll shoot more groups in the near future, but at this point, it is pretty clear my Uberti prefers the Johnston and Dow over both the Kerr and the round ball. And to keep things in perspective, the J&D is virtually duplicating the muzzle velocity and speed of John Browning's .45 ACP.
    This was my first outing with this Uberti 1860. It is rather stiff -- perhaps the famous arbor issue -- and sucked a few caps.
    Kudos to Jefferson Arsenal for selling me 30 each of the J&D and Kerr for this purpose, and of course to Mark Hubbs of Eras Gone for bringing molds for these historic bullets to the market.



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    Swedonia

    Active Member
    TGT Supporter
    May 8, 2023
    221
    46
    Sweetwater, TX
    By the way, Texans, these fully fluted Uberti 1860s come very close to duplicating the very early lot of fluted 1860s that Sam Colt sold to his friend Ben McCulloch for use by the Texas Rangers, sneaking in the transfer just before the North sanctioned such sales. They have a feel and balance that is unique compared to the much more common unfluted 1860s. Wonderful and historic sixguns.
     
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