Knight LK-93

Mustang Jon

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Jan 31, 2019
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Myrtle Beach SC
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I don’t know much about muzzleloaders other than a couple CVA’s I’ve had back in the day. I’m wondering if anyone can give me some insight on this Knight LK-93? I have the opportunity to buy it but neither one of us know what it’s worth or what a fair price would be. It is just the muzzleloader with nothing else. No tool for the breech plug or any supplies like caps or powder. Can you tell me a little about your experience with Knight muzzleloaders? 960CF21B-B739-4983-9F7C-E7F754826CCF.jpeg511F211B-CAC0-44A7-8440-67A86AA63CF6.jpeg
 
I don't play with modern inlines, but there is a dedicated forum to modern muzzeloaders.

 
I have the lk 93 that my dad bought me when I was a teenager. I've killed many deer with it. It's a great gun with what I call two safeties. My correct gun verbiage won't be right. You have side safety then the round nobe cooker after you pull back you turn it to show red line then ready to fire. You will need then breech plug tool and an Allen wrench to take stock off and trigger out.
 
I killed lots of deer with the stainless version of that. It was a less expensive option to the flagship MK85 which started the inline craze. They are accurate guns. Is it set up with #11 percussion caps or been converted to 209 primers? That gun was around $200 ish new so I'd say $75- $100 since no tool, a little more if it's been converted. If you buy it try green sabots, Hornady 240 gr 44 caliber XTP bullets, and 90 gr of Pyrodex. Tho we have bought other muzzleloaders over the years we still two LK93 and two MK85 in the family. They all shoot 2" or better at 100 yards with that load.
 
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