Thanks guys! This fowler has been really good to me in smoothbore round ball events over the years. From time to time, there are targets on some of the smoothbore trails I've shot that were well out past 100 meters. On these I load about 140 grains of powder, my tight patch/ball and allow as much barrel between the wedding band and the base of the front sight as the height of the front sight, up to about half of the barrel. As long as I hold and follow through, I usually hit these distant gongs. I engraved a deep longitudinal cut in the breech and tang down the centre of the barrel about two inches long. This I fill with soap stone welder's markers pencil so that I have a reference to keep my windage in line with the target. No rear sight above the plane of the barrel is the rule for trade gun matches. Inaccuracy with a smoothbore comes from small charges that don't develop enough velocity to keep the ball from veering off left or right, up or down, like a beach ball or a volley ball which when it slows down, takes an unintentional direction. If any of that makes sense.
Of note, the architecture of the Chambers' Pennsylvania fowler allows one to aim right along the top of the barrel without fear of being cracked in the face. I'd love to see their English fowler like the one Bob in the Woods shoots!!
Who's up for a pistol postal match for October? Same target. Same range. Offhand, of course.