If funneling or "coning" were an asset to accuracy,I am sure that ALL the top makers
of match rifles in days long gone would have used the idea.Bill Large, to my knowledge
never made one with a funneled muzzle unless it was as an experiment to see if there was
any merit to the idea.Harry Pope who was not a maker of round ball guns said that the base
of the bullet and the muzzle were what steered the bullet.Prove him wrong if you can.
False muzzles are what Dan said they are,they protect the real muzzle from damage and also
expose a sharp,90 degree angle to regulate gas escape when the gun is fired.
One every (what few really)guns I have made,the first thing I do after the first shot is to look at the muzzle
and look for a star burst pattern from the grooves and if it's uniform,I consider it a good finish of the
muzzle and if not,out comes the crowning ball and the old hand cranked drill.Today,I'd take my battery
powered drill but back in "the day"the old geared hand cranked drill was all I had.
When Bill Large was active and at his peak,he expected a really good shooter to make a 4 leaf clover with 5 shots at 100 yards with his barrels and I am one of those who was able to do that and there were others who did it as well.
Bob Roller