An old friend got involved in muzzleloading, and like everything he does, he went at it like he was killing snakes. A firm believer in that second place in anything just makes you the first loser, he pretty much shot every day. He had a quite rare engraved stainless steel mounted Tryon plains rifle in .54 cal., and he was hard to beat. Eventually I started getting pretty close to his scores, and eventually started beating him every so often. He told me one day he thought he’d worn the barrel out on his gun. I took a look at it, and thought the bore looked a little egg shaped. With a little measuring it became pretty obvious that the bore was egged out in one spot. I told him that cutting an inch off the muzzle was the old timers cure, so since that would have put the tail of the front sight beyond the muzzle, we cut off a little more, and cut a new dovetail for the sight. Problem solved, no more getting beat by old Hungry Horse.
He cleaned that gun with the wooden rod, but he had soaked it in turpentine, and linseed oil, to make it flexible, it also made it retain grit. This, and always cleaning the barrel in the same orientation, lapped a wide spot in a muzzleloader barrel with a chrome lined bore. So if you think “This can’t possibly happen” you would be wrong.
Hungry Horse