I was amazed at how smooth she brings a rifle up and also without the gun not firing how she doesn't Flinch when she squeezes the trigger! I'm very impressed especially with her age! Just found this channel the other day. The first video I watched was when she shot that 458 Magnum twice! LOL
Wow!! This is very cool!! Such poise pouring 80 grains of black powder in the breech block to hurl a 950gr minie ball down range. That is a "thunder stick". Memories!! The cartridge rifle, no worries! 100 year old rock hard black powder and flat mercury primers, it happens. Research the casing and the primer style, if replacable. Seemed to be paper patched cartridges, knock them down, clean, repunch primers, and patch the lead. The brass case may share a common size with a later rimmed case. The brass is not fired, just hand set the primers. At least you know what is in that casing. It's a lot of fun!! Thank you for this installment! I apperciate your intelligence and effort for showing these rifles!
I hadn't heard of the kammerlader before today, when I watched a video gunsmith working on one. I am very happy to have seen one of the paper cartridge models fire. I am now a subscriber and I plan to catch up with your videos.
She does pretty good with those big guns. Very unique firearms she's using too and in excellent condition. Crazy loading procedure on the paper cartridge 55cal.. That thing would blow your arm clean off. Nasty business.
My first thought was "why not just use reloads for the 1860/67?" And then, on second thought, I realized reloading dies for a Kammelader probably aren't exactly falling off the shelves at local stores😀 Third thought was a cartridge design that old might be rimfire, which makes reloading kind of a moot point.... Well, anyway, carry on, and thanks for showing us Americans that we ain't the only ones lucky enough to enjoy shooting!
I think it might indeed be rimfire - when she holds the fired cartridge up at 2:29 you can see the glint from the firing pin impact (at about 8 o'clock). Plus there's some photos on this page (not sure if it's the same exact model)
Do you have Jarmann M1884 the first centerfire, repeating bolt-action rifle, adopted as standard issue based on an entirely new design? It was one of the last black powder weapons produced. I cant find any demo vids on internet on it. I want to see it's 8-round, tubular magazine in which the rounds were lined up in a tube below the barrel. It would be something to see and demonstrated.
Wow! You are an amazing and very brave young lady, shooting those ancient rifles with highly questionable ammo. I was on the edge of my seat, watching your video, hoping the rifle wouldn’t injure you! Thank God you are alright! Hopefully, the next two rifles you are going to tackle will be with recently manufactured (and safer) ammo. Love your videos, and I want to see you in good health for a long, long time!
The way you bring a gun up you look like you've been doing it 50 years so smooth and precise! And without that gun firing it's a Telltale sign whether you're flinching when you squeeze the trigger, which you also seem to be an expert! I'm really impressed!
It's amazing that breech loading rifles were in use so long ago. The Sharps rifle and the Remington Rolling Block rifle did not exist until the 1870’s. One of your rifles was made before the American Civil War, 1861 to 1865. Americans were still using muzzle loading rifles in the USA when both of your breech loading rifles were made. Percussion caps were used in that era. Flintlock ignition was out of style by the 1870's.
the magazine fed henry rifle was used in the 1860's in the civil war. so was the spencer. and the sharps. and the burnside. the hall rifle was technically a breechloader and was used in the 1840,s
The thing I noticed about this video is that she takes a deep breath before she shoulders the rifle and then squeezes the trigger and she doesn't move. That should be a lesson to us all.......no matter what platform!
I am familiar with muzzleloaders. I would never buy one because they just seem too awkward to operate. The kammerlader is something I have never seen or heard of before.... Now I am obsessed.
Please if you have another misfire or squib count to thirty before opening the chamber. Open the chamber away from your face and eyes. Allow the cartridge to fall on the ground and leave it alone. That cartridge could fire later. I have never seen one fire later but have heard reports of such. I have fired over one million rounds it can happen
I that's hard to describe. But I can easily describe something. If you want hunting rifles with a max 5 mag capacity you need a hunting license which last your life, you can own up to 7 guns everything except auto firearms. Handguns = 6 months active shooting at a local pistol club. It's also possible to step it up to semi Hk416 etc.. but all in all, everything needs approval from the police, so if you want to own a firearm you need to send a firearms application to the police, the police will check if you have a hunting license, if you are a competition shooter etc, they will call your local club if you want a handgun to ask how many times you have been training the last six moths, they will check if you have been convicted with drug of alcohol related crimes, threats and violence. If the police is comfortable with you owning a firearm they will approve it. To be honest, it's easy for a faire and square person to own a firearm. Our country are built on much more than it was in the Viking age. We have become a people wanting to help each other in hard times, be polite and nice. A fun fact is that Norway has more guns in private homes pr capita than the USA.
ᚵᛚᛂᚾ ᚨᚿᛑᚱᛂᛊᛂᚾ do those restrictions on the number you can own also apply to historical firearms? For example say I had the service rifle from almost every major player of ww2 including France, Germany, Poland, Italy, Japan, British commonwealth and China. Could I own some modern rifles as well or would they take up all my slots? P.s before you ask I don't own one from the U.S because local laws have banned firearms like the M1 and the Springfield rifles are currently asking for around 2k for a butchered example
Most of the people commenting say they love watching you shoot. I also love it but not as much as the relief on your face when the first gun didn't fire. I was happy it didn't. You area brave and tough young lady, some how I thought the first gun was pushing into a different zone of punishment.The second one in slow motion showed more punishment than I wanted to see.
You obviously haven't yet watched her .458 magnum video. That's literally an "elephant gun", that used to be Remington's largest rifle cartridge. She handles it well.
Najpierw napnij kurek i spuść go na kołek ø 1" ustawiony między lufą i kurkiem poprzecznie do lufy. Odgryź papier od strony prochu i wsyp proch a potem wciśnij pocisk i oderwij resztę papieru. Napnij kurek i wyjmij drewniany kołek ø 1", kołek powinien zwisać na rzemieniu pod kabłąkiem spustu lub kabłąkiem kurka.First, tighten the hammer and release it onto a ø 1 "pin positioned between the barrel and the hammer crosswise to the barrel. Bite off the paper from the side of the gunpowder and sprinkle the powder, then press the bullet and tear off the rest of the paper.
The cap in the hat trick. I really have to hand it to her, Every time she lifted the gun she looked like a weightlifter trying to lift a new world record.
a few weeks ago a dude at my lockal gun ranch a dude had a .22 pistol misfire with our "youthpistol"... we talked a few sec and suddenly it went off into the barrage. the first time that happend to me. well in my present. im freaking carefull now not picken em up for at least a min if i clear a misfires. im sure you dont want that rimfire going off in your hand!
Charles Brantner What would he be laughing at? She proves time and time again that she knows how to handle a big rifle, she is safety conscious, she gets her shooting stance set. She does everything right, why the hell would her father be laughing at her? If that were my daughter, I’d be damned proud of her! She sure a heck stands up to any recoil!
It never ceases to amaze me how well you tolerate heavy recoil. Kudos young lady!
Why is watching this girl shoot so relaxing to me. I could literally watch her shoot all day!!
I was amazed at how smooth she brings a rifle up and also without the gun not firing how she doesn't Flinch when she squeezes the trigger! I'm very impressed especially with her age! Just found this channel the other day.
The first video I watched was when she shot that 458 Magnum twice! LOL
What a tough young lady ...
You're very fortunate to be able to shoot some of those old classics. I'm happy for you...
The engineering in these rifles is amazing. Thank you for the education. Also, best concealed carry ever, keeping things in your beanie! :)
Wow!! This is very cool!! Such poise pouring 80 grains of black powder in the breech block to hurl a 950gr minie ball down range. That is a "thunder stick". Memories!!
The cartridge rifle, no worries! 100 year old rock hard black powder and flat mercury primers, it happens. Research the casing and the primer style, if replacable. Seemed to be paper patched cartridges, knock them down, clean, repunch primers, and patch the lead. The brass case may share a common size with a later rimmed case. The brass is not fired, just hand set the primers. At least you know what is in that casing. It's a lot of fun!!
Thank you for this installment! I apperciate your intelligence and effort for showing these rifles!
I'm pretty sure cartridge-converted Kammerladers use rimfire ammo...
I hadn't heard of the kammerlader before today, when I watched a video gunsmith working on one. I am very happy to have seen one of the paper cartridge models fire. I am now a subscriber and I plan to catch up with your videos.
I just love old guns, especially old hunting guns :) Greetings from Finland!
I’m impressed with the way you’re handling these rifles.
3:54 When you pulled the cap out of your cap, I couldn't help but laugh! :-)
Never seen a rifle like that before or heard of it. The Your Girl is something else., very pretty.
Ian, the Gun Jesus, and this girl, the Gun Virgin Mary.
Bro the gun Virgin Mary ,I like your style
Halleluja!
That looks like so much fun to shoot. Great job!
Truly cool. I've never seen one loaded like this.
Recently found your videos. Awesome job and keep up the good work!.
I do not understand English.
Your videos make me happy.
You are cute and funny.
Nice video. Cool old guns you get to shoot.
She does pretty good with those big guns. Very unique firearms she's using too and in excellent condition. Crazy loading procedure on the paper cartridge 55cal.. That thing would blow your arm clean off. Nasty business.
What a beautiful rifle. I had never seen a Kammerlader before. Who love to shoot one.
My first thought was "why not just use reloads for the 1860/67?" And then, on second thought, I realized reloading dies for a Kammelader probably aren't exactly falling off the shelves at local stores😀
Third thought was a cartridge design that old might be rimfire, which makes reloading kind of a moot point....
Well, anyway, carry on, and thanks for showing us Americans that we ain't the only ones lucky enough to enjoy shooting!
I think it might indeed be rimfire - when she holds the fired cartridge up at 2:29 you can see the glint from the firing pin impact (at about 8 o'clock). Plus there's some photos on this page (not sure if it's the same exact model)
awesome! great rifles... I was flinching every time the 1888 cartridges failed :-)
Joe P but you noticed she never did.
Dad wanted a boy but worked really really well with what he had! Congrats dad, job well done !
Very nice to these rifles firing. Thanks for the video .
Execellent video! Very fun and historical! Thank you for sharing.
Do you have Jarmann M1884 the first centerfire, repeating bolt-action rifle, adopted as standard issue based on an entirely new design? It was one of the last black powder weapons produced. I cant find any demo vids on internet on it. I want to see it's 8-round, tubular magazine in which the rounds were lined up in a tube below the barrel. It would be something to see and demonstrated.
Hi, Nice kammerlader powerful shots showing recoil
The first one is rimfire right? if you turned them around and try and strike a different spot they could fire
Very bold and very beautiful girl. With respect from Russia!
3:55 useful place to store caps ;-)
hi
HAH! :"D
Like a cap in a cap.
And the short ramrod in a boot!
Hei, jeg er en Amerikaner og jeg liker din videoer.
Do you know what rifle (or pistol) Roald Amundsen took to the Arctic and Antarctic?
He used a Krag-Jørgensen, it's in the Fram museum in Oslo.
Heja Norge 🙌🙌🙌. Super bra video. 👍
Что именно было с патронами. Оциревшиий порох или сама винтовка не пробила гильзу?
Wow! You are an amazing and very brave young lady, shooting those ancient rifles with highly questionable ammo. I was on the edge of my seat, watching your video, hoping the rifle wouldn’t injure you! Thank God you are alright! Hopefully, the next two rifles you are going to tackle will be with recently manufactured (and safer) ammo. Love your videos, and I want to see you in good health for a long, long time!
Hehe, yeah i was a bit nervous too, next time we will have ammo thats working :)
Great video I now need a Kammerlader for the collection lol
900 grain bullet with 80 grains of black powder...wow!
The way you bring a gun up you look like you've been doing it 50 years so smooth and precise! And without that gun firing it's a Telltale sign whether you're flinching when you squeeze the trigger, which you also seem to be an expert! I'm really impressed!
It's amazing that breech loading rifles were in use so long ago. The Sharps rifle and the Remington Rolling Block rifle did not exist until the 1870’s. One of your rifles was made before the American Civil War, 1861 to 1865. Americans were still using muzzle loading rifles in the USA when both of your breech loading rifles were made. Percussion caps were used in that era. Flintlock ignition was out of style by the 1870's.
the magazine fed henry rifle was used in the 1860's in the civil war. so was the spencer. and the sharps. and the burnside. the hall rifle was technically a breechloader and was used in the 1840,s
Nice ❤from Germany !.👍🎄🙋
Can't Believe it was still in Use!
The thing I noticed about this video is that she takes a deep breath before she shoulders the rifle and then squeezes the trigger and she doesn't move.
That should be a lesson to us all.......no matter what platform!
Front sight press
En tuff och kunnig ung kvinna som kan hantera vapnen väl. Dessutom ett underbart utseende. 🙂
I am familiar with muzzleloaders. I would never buy one because they just seem too awkward to operate. The kammerlader is something I have never seen or heard of before.... Now I am obsessed.
Please if you have another misfire or squib count to thirty before opening the chamber.
Open the chamber away from your face and eyes. Allow the cartridge to fall on the ground and leave it alone. That cartridge could fire later. I have never seen one fire later but have heard reports of such. I have fired over one million rounds it can happen
Can you make a video explaining Norwegian firearms laws? Have a great night!
Thats not impossible :)
Asking for a friend?
I that's hard to describe. But I can easily describe something. If you want hunting rifles with a max 5 mag capacity you need a hunting license which last your life, you can own up to 7 guns everything except auto firearms. Handguns = 6 months active shooting at a local pistol club. It's also possible to step it up to semi Hk416 etc.. but all in all, everything needs approval from the police, so if you want to own a firearm you need to send a firearms application to the police, the police will check if you have a hunting license, if you are a competition shooter etc, they will call your local club if you want a handgun to ask how many times you have been training the last six moths, they will check if you have been convicted with drug of alcohol related crimes, threats and violence. If the police is comfortable with you owning a firearm they will approve it. To be honest, it's easy for a faire and square person to own a firearm. Our country are built on much more than it was in the Viking age. We have become a people wanting to help each other in hard times, be polite and nice. A fun fact is that Norway has more guns in private homes pr capita than the USA.
@@NorwegianSlug That sounds a lot like Canadian firearm laws.
ᚵᛚᛂᚾ ᚨᚿᛑᚱᛂᛊᛂᚾ do those restrictions on the number you can own also apply to historical firearms? For example say I had the service rifle from almost every major player of ww2 including France, Germany, Poland, Italy, Japan, British commonwealth and China. Could I own some modern rifles as well or would they take up all my slots?
P.s before you ask I don't own one from the U.S because local laws have banned firearms like the M1 and the Springfield rifles are currently asking for around 2k for a butchered example
Very good as always . Where did you get theses old rifles? . They are awesome . Thanks for sharing and keep up that beautiful smile . :)
Thank you, its my uncles rifles, so I get to borrow them ;)
Thats Awesome !! Thank you for sharing them with us. :)
I was amazed at how quietly it was shooting in the first 2.5 minutes. At least 4 shots fired, with barely ANY noise OR recoil! 😂
What do you know the cartridges failed but the good ole powder and ball didn't
Well done, I am sure any one of my three daughters would say "no" to such an en devour.
Really interesting rifles.
That's a very interesting breech/hammer mechanism.
Love where she kept the primer lol
Put new primers and powder in the old cartridge? Feasible?
It's a beautiful rifle
I AM FROM GREECE HELLO :)
I was really hoping for a Krag-Jorgenson in this series
Most of the people commenting say they love watching you shoot. I also love it but not as much as the relief on your face when the first gun didn't fire. I was happy it didn't. You area brave and tough young lady, some how I thought the first gun was pushing into a different zone of punishment.The second one in slow motion showed more punishment than I wanted to see.
You obviously haven't yet watched her .458 magnum video. That's literally an "elephant gun", that used to be Remington's largest rifle cartridge. She handles it well.
That was a neat design, better than packing it all down the barrel.
I am impressed.
Very pretty
Is that bullet from 1847 as well?
Wow ! well done.
Thanks :)
Keep dropping those hammers Katharina. You do your own reloading correct!
Najpierw napnij kurek i spuść go na kołek ø 1" ustawiony między lufą i kurkiem poprzecznie do lufy. Odgryź papier od strony prochu i wsyp proch a potem wciśnij pocisk i oderwij resztę papieru. Napnij kurek i wyjmij drewniany kołek ø 1", kołek powinien zwisać na rzemieniu pod kabłąkiem spustu lub kabłąkiem kurka.First, tighten the hammer and release it onto a ø 1 "pin positioned between the barrel and the hammer crosswise to the barrel. Bite off the paper from the side of the gunpowder and sprinkle the powder, then press the bullet and tear off the rest of the paper.
The beanie is fun to watch dancing
The cap in the hat trick. I really have to hand it to her, Every time she lifted the gun she looked like a weightlifter trying to lift a new world record.
Excellent rifle. And the girl too.
Where i can find the same hat - with percussion caps? It is very cleverly to use it this way in woman style.
what kind of ear-plugs did you use?
Ich finde für diese Frau einfach keine passende Worte. Oberhammer. WOW :-) in jeglicher Hinsicht
Bellissima, QUANDO FAI UN NUOVO VIDEO? SEI ARRIVATA IN SUDAFRICA? TI STAI DIVERTENDO?
IO STO PROGRAMMANDO DI FARE UNA CAPATINA A DUBAJ !.
CIAO !
What A BRAVE Girlie ----BRAVO
It was like, OMG please don't work, please dont fire, i'm so scare XD
a few weeks ago a dude at my lockal gun ranch a dude had a .22 pistol misfire with our "youthpistol"... we talked a few sec and suddenly it went off into the barrage.
the first time that happend to me. well in my present.
im freaking carefull now not picken em up for at least a min if i clear a misfires.
im sure you dont want that rimfire going off in your hand!
That's a good way to down size cabbage for krout
boy you have to love this girl. ill bet her uncle and dad love her to death. good luck and keep shooting. love your vids
1849 Kammerlader with brasscatridges ... ?!
Imagine trying to load that on a battle field.
So cute!!
You should go to the Olympics! !!
Du kan vel eie en sånn uten noe papirarbeid og våpenlisens fordi den ble lagdt før 1870 :)
I will say this ya hit what your shooting at.
Нравится когда красивая девушка занимается с оружием. Вот бы ещё с холодным оружием бы видео снимала.
Find a patient bear for this rifle.😂Nice weapon
in 1880 the smok wass all over the hill gethinburd devol den 27 time in 50 wards
That thing looks heavy
There is data for making your own cartridges
Чудная девчонка,тормозная какая то.
GIRL I LOVE YOU
Would make a good squirrel gun...lol🤣
I don't like looking down a chamber when putting on a cap. too dangerous...
Hello. Pls reply..
I'm just imagining her dad behind the camera laughing at her the whole time lol!
Charles Brantner shut up
Charles Brantner What would he be laughing at? She proves time and time again that she knows how to handle a big rifle, she is safety conscious, she gets her shooting stance set. She does everything right, why the hell would her father be laughing at her? If that were my daughter, I’d be damned proud of her! She sure a heck stands up to any recoil!
Look at the thirsty white knights commenting here 😆. I have two boys, and I would laugh too, if that happened. It's called family and having fun.
You can always use it as a club.
What a sweetheart!
So many thirsty comments.
I bet she got a kick out of firing that gun
Nice
wow kult :)
💣💥
Imagine people went to war with that.. haha
What a lovely girl! !!!!!!!!!!!!
Ох ебааааать. Вот это качирга. Бедная Катарина.