Given all of the in-line muzzleloaders on the market today, which would you buy for a deer/elk hunt in Colorado?
Quite a few good options to choose from. I had a T/C Omega for a long time and really like T/C's. That being said the QLA creates some issues when shooting conicals. Enough so that I would hesitate to buy one as a Colorado specific gun. CVA has the Accura and the Optima which are both nice guns and a solid choice too. I recently purchased a Knight Ultra Light and am eager to get it out! It's a little more expensive than the others but is a quality gun. I'm not sure you can go wrong with any inline? They all have there pluses and minuses, it really comes down to personal likes and dislikes. Go fondle a few and see what trips your trigger.Given all of the in-line muzzleloaders on the market today, which would you buy for a deer/elk hunt in Colorado?
Yeah the Optima gets really good reviews. Winchester... If you wanna see an Optima V2, I've got a brand new one you can check out. You can also look at the Knight Ultra light I just got too.I've read a lot of good things about the CVA Optima V2 but haven't shot it. Supposed to be a very accurate break-action ML.
Tough one to answer knowing opinions can be all over the place... I think reliability would be the same or nearly the same with any of the big three (CVA, T/C, Knight), of course like everything your gonna hear the occasional horror story. Accuracy is another that is hard to nail down. In my opinion muzzleloaders can and will be cantankerous, you have to really spend the time and money to try different powder, bullet and primer combinations. Some will be easier to get dialed in than others but most can be dialed in with some effort. Some are just inherently bad shooters though. Ease of cleaning probably goes to the break action like the CVA, then the drop down action like the T/C, and lastly the bolt action of the Knight. Of course once you get the hang of it, and a system down on cleaning, one could argue they are all the same. Ease of cleaning is one thing that's kept me from being soley a Knight guy. After owning a few though, I really think they are the best thing going for muzzleloaders but are a little more expensive then the others. They are all good rifles though. I've owned them all, and several different models of each.You know, I actually meant the CVA Acura, though both the Acura and Optima get good reviews.
Not having yet picked up black powder, my assumption is that the most important things are accuracy, reliability and ease of cleaning, maybe also weight, in that order. Which ML do you think scores highest on those metrics?