I will be surprised if there is any appreciable difference if both barrels are clean. If they are both very dirty may be the flat breech will be quicker. In either case not enough difference for a human to detect. There goes my common sense kicking in again.
Hi David,
I think you are very likely correct. I hope my ability to avoid variables is good enough to show differences. But, in any work like this I have to be willing to admit the findings could be inconclusive.
If someone pinned me down for a speculation, it would probably be that the faster breech system will be the one that places the barrel charge and the priming powder the closest to each other. It may be hard to beat a plain breech with a vent liner with a very thin web and priming powder up against the barrel. On the other hand a Nock breech may get prime and barrel charge together just fine. I guess the point of the test is to fine out.
With the various tests I've done there are a few things that I'm beginning like:
fast locks
Swiss Null B priming powder
Chambers vent holes
Vent dia in the .064-.070 range
very slight exterior cone on liner
prime against the barrel
Now I have to think about breech design - never even considered that before. This should be fun. I thank you all for the chance to bounce ideas around. We have a chance to actually put numbers on things that we have only guessed at before.
Here's a question for your thoughts: you are shooting birds in 1800-1810 with a state-of-the-art English double fowler. Do you think you could sense an extra fast breech by the amount of lead you use to get on the bird? Can you today shooting clay pigeons? Or are there too many inherent variables in a flint ignition system to sense a change in lead?
Regards,
Pletch