From "Firearms of the American West" - One of the "Forts", might have been Fort Bent - or another, has the habit of the night guards coming off shift in the morning, would shoot their 'load'
at a target at 100yards distance to the Butt. In the middle of the target was a 4" "bull". If they hit that bullseye, they got the next night off.
A visiting Leuy, with his company wrote up the scenario.
The camp commander told the Leuy his Fort was armed with the new .58 calibre rifles and that they were amazingly accurate. The visiting Leuy's company were armed with the "Old Jager"
rifled .69's & 1842's I think. He told the camp commander he thought the .69's were more accurate & asked if his men could shoot against the camp's night shift. This was arranged. The Leuy
wrote that none of the Camp's guards hit the 'mark', yet none of his own men missed. Good shooting indeed! How much was BS, I do not know, but the Leuy wrote that the camp commander
"put in a request" to replace his camp's .58's for the rifled Jagers.
I thought this was a delightful story. .69's rule!!