.50-70 in an 1866 (1867) Cadet Trapdoor
Moderator: 45govt
.50-70 in an 1866 (1867) Cadet Trapdoor
Hi folks. First time here so happy to get to know everyone! Is it safe to fire cowboy / trapdoor .50-70 load in an 1867 Cadet? My research doesn't disclose that the chamber was reduced or weakened in any way from the 1866 rifle. Thanks!
- Dick Hosmer
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- Joined: Tue Mar 07, 2023 7:05 pm
- Location: Northern CA
Re: .50-70 in an 1866 (1867) Cadet Trapdoor
Congratulations on having a rare rifle! There should be no problem in chambering.
Cowboy ammo would be good - full power .50-70 would kick pretty hard as those arms are considerably lighter than the full rifle.
Cowboy ammo would be good - full power .50-70 would kick pretty hard as those arms are considerably lighter than the full rifle.
Re: .50-70 in an 1866 (1867) Cadet Trapdoor
Thank you Mr Hosmer. Consulted your excellent reference book; it says chambered for .50-70 but I wanted to double check ref. the pressure issue. Jim
Re: .50-70 in an 1866 (1867) Cadet Trapdoor
Weren't the '67 cadet and '70 carbines supposed to shoot the lighter 50-55 cadet/carbine cartridge, which uses a 50-70 case but loaded with less powder and a lighter bullet.
- Dick Hosmer
- Posts: 627
- Joined: Tue Mar 07, 2023 7:05 pm
- Location: Northern CA
Re: .50-70 in an 1866 (1867) Cadet Trapdoor
Yes, absolutely, but the chambers were (as in the M1873 and later) full length. The only Springfield-made short-chambered .50 was, IIRC, the Navy cadet rolling block, around the same time. Different strokes for different folks, I guess....