This is not a 1:12" twist barrel! Look at the end of the barrel in the photo. Follow one land in its path toward the other end of the barrel. At best, it makes only one half a turn in the whole barrel length. So if the barrel is 33" long, the rate of twist is 1:66". Excellent photo, by the way...
Exactly!
The fastest rate of twist I have ever seen in a .45 calibre ctg. gun, was 15", with 18" to 22" being standard for many years. Elmer Keith once wrote that 24" would stabilize a 2,000fps 500gr. bullet just fine.
The "trapdoor" Springfield used a 1:22 twist to stabilize a 500 grain bullet when in reality
was 525 grains.In trials at Sandy Hook NJ along a beach it beat the legendary 577-450 Martini-Henry
at all distances some of which were around or maybe more than 2000 yards.This old rifle
had no fancy rifling. What it had was 3 grooves and lands and on some specimens it was found
to have grove diameters of .465. The consensus was and probably a correct one was the 45-70 made better
use of the tightly compressed powder charge and the heavier bullet. The 577-450 if memory is right used
85 grains of powder and a 480 grain paper patched bullet. Potent but not as efficient as it should be.
I am no fan of the TD Springfield and after having a trapdoor break off in my hand while ejecting a fired case
I took it over to Bill Large's shop and made a muzzle loader out of it with a .450,1:18 with 8 lands and grooves.
John Marra,a local Home&Garden TV personality had one blow open when the thumb latch failed and allowed the locking cam
to roll over and unlock the action on firing.The abruptly ejected case hit the ejection pin and saved him for injury.
Bob Roller