gentlemen
Zimm's got a point - there aren't many people like us, Lynn - who actually work up loads for their rifles. More common, is the shooter who burns less than 5 pounds of powder a year and shoots only a few times each year - usually at a rondy, or local shoot or informal get-to-gether. He picks a charge close to his calibre and shoots at 25 yards. When he shoots a good group right off the bat, he's finished testing- besides it took 2 hours to shoot 10 shots, wiping between shots as he was told you have to.
No Zimmer - my loads aren't excessive - but not many here shoot 85gr. 2f in a .45 - or 75g.r 3f for that matter. Too, not many shoot 75 of 2f or 65gr. 3F in a .40. I know dang well, if they owned a .69, they'd probably not be shooting 140 to 165gr.either. I know a guy with a .54 smoothie who uses 55gr. in it and 75 in a 12 bore. My little 20 bore gets 82gr. for close targets and 100 for longer ones - not sure it's necesary, but I think it helps on the 100 yard targets - it flattens the trajectory a bit - that's eveident. Again, not excessive, but more than many people shoot.
By squid loads, I am referring to a 45gr. charge in a .40 and 50gr. charge in a .45. They are arbitrarily chosen charges most likely and never been paper tested past 25 yards, where just about everything including my choked 20 gauge fowler will put 5 shots into a rounded, 5 shot hole. I know guys who use 55gr. in a .54, and 55gr. in a .50 - along with one who uses 65gr. 2F in a .20 smoothie and wonders why his ball drops so much at 100yards - his gun goes fffooooomp when it goes off. Those are squib loads.
Yep - the bunny's about the size of the 8 ring. A good shot can hit it every time - meet Taylor. Me?- maybe almost every time, but only if I'm using the .40, .58 DR or the .69 peeshooter. Since Taylor switched to neetsfoot oil and 68gr. 3F in his .40, he's about unbeatable on the trail now. My .40 turned in 2,250fps with 65gr. 3F and LHV.
I've only seen a few guys Ace our trail - 45 targets long. Come on up and try it out. Most complain it's the hardest trail in BC - I don't know, but I've never seen one more difficult.
And yes - paper punching, ie; getting wining scores on ringed targets is harder than hitting the 6 to 8" plates. All our plates aren't 6" to 8". We've 2" gophers at 60 yards, 2" horizontal bar - it's only 43 yards away, got to be easy - some hit, many don't. Card split - briquet must disintegrate completely, golf-balls, 2" X 2" pigs at 35 yards, 10" high fox at 92 yards - gotta be easy - looks like a coyote - amazing how many people miss with a rifle. Full sized turkey at around 100 - and farm duck at 105 yards - all easy, but amazing how they can be missed. Some rarely miss the long shots with a smoothbore, yet manage with a rifle.
Getting a winning score on targets seems to be as difficult as it appears to get a winning score on plates, though. The mixed up ranges can play on a person by the time he or she's fired 50 shots. It's more like shooting an aggregate of paper targets due to the volume of shooting.
Come on up, you can even shoot my most accurate rifle.
Some targets are challenging - the small angled log on the downrange left has about 6" of chain hanging down with an edge-on pig target that's 3/8" wide - it's about 65yards down range - chain is an inch - hit it and get a card punch - close to a 10 ring, I guess. Taylor's never missed the dang plate, doesn't even shoot the chain.
Sometimes there's smoke for previous shots, just sitting in the still air - it's your turn - take your shot or take a miss.