Do any of you fellows find an advantage in shooting long distance with .58 or bigger as compared to shooting long distance with .45 to .54.
What I mean by long distance, I mean 100 yds. to 150 + yds.
My .58 shoots very well at 75+ yds. not effected with slight side breeze as shooting my .45 cal. rifles.
I have two barrels waiting for a stock to be completed. One in .69 and one in .75, I have never shot guns of these calibre before.
Fred
Back in the mid 18andwhenevers, the Brits figured out the .451 with a 530 grain bullet was the best
long range load of the day using about 85 grains of high quality black powder.A few 40's were tried
but the .451 is still the dominant long range muzzle loader.I know the definition of "long range" has
has changed with advances in gun making and serious experimentation like that of Joseph Whitworth
pretty well,along with his contemporaries brought the long range muzzle loader to its final conclusion.
Identical loads in brass cases carried black powder to its final conclusion until revival in our time.
I started with muzzle loaders in 1951 with a $20 purchase of a fine Enfield carbine and was shortly
thereafter initiated into round ball shooting and a 100 yard offhand match was considered long range
and most were shot at 25-50 yards and it was fun.
Here in America the real long range muzzle loader lay dormant until advocates like Bill Roberts from
Alabama started stirring interest in these rifles about 20?years ago.That interest spread to a small
number of shooters,including me.I had a fine Whitworth/Henry semi military .451 from 1962 until 1973
and while it stirred no interest other than my own it was an idea from long ago that finally was seen
as a potential "new"venue for black powder in our time and I give Bill Roberts full credit for it's come
back in our time.It started or perhaps revived a long forgotten method of shooting beyond distances
normally not associated with muzzle loaders.I made a presentable copy of an Alex Henry using a GM
barrel of .450-.458,Don Brown semi finished stock and butt plate/trigger and guard and my own 4 pin
lock and sights.I shot it one time against the Sharps and Rolling Blocks at 500 meters and one of the
shooters said "If this guy insists on that muzzle loader,we'll have to move the targets in closer".
I told him not to be concerned and in the 5 shot match at 500 meters I got 4 out of 5 and only a
tree branch partially blocking my sight saved the 5th one.The best the others did was 3 hits with the
breech loaders.
My rant is over.
Bob Roller