I have made a rifling twist gage which I occasionally use to check the twist rate of Kentucky double rifles for my ongoing study. It requires a reasonably good barrel, and runs a small risk of getting the special jag caught in the bore. For that reason, I rarely dare run the jag all the way to the breech where bad pitting is frequently encountered. And I don’t try it in rough barrels. My method seems to be reproducible within about 1” in a complete revolution between three consecutive runs in a good barrel, and I need to check some modern barrels with known twist rates to get an idea of accuracy. I usually run 180 deg of twist, measure the length, and double it.
My data sheets are about 4000 miles away from me now, as I am traveling. Not many 18th C barrels in my study, but I have some flint and percussion rifles and some jaegers checked. If asked, I could get data together in February.
Bill Paton