Author Topic: Yardage/Accuracy. Barrel Length and Twist.  (Read 2689 times)

Offline Kurt

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Re: Yardage/Accuracy. Barrel Length and Twist.
« Reply #25 on: March 12, 2024, 04:36:44 PM »
Check out YouTube, Idaho Lewis. He uses stock TC rifles for the most part and has some very impressive results.

Offline J.M.Browning

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Re: Yardage/Accuracy. Barrel Length and Twist.
« Reply #26 on: March 12, 2024, 06:03:31 PM »
I shoot 100 yard bench ffg I yet to shoot my Kibler 45 cal sincerely hoping the rifle is accurate out of the box other than sight . I find most SHOOTERS need to work on skill set & less on  Barrel Length and Twist ,load & such . I would also give my subjective opinion being a new member & knowing absolutely nothing I talk of , I have seen some very fine Shooting on this board .
Thank you Boone , Glass with all the contemplate I read with todays (shooter's lightly taken as such) , you keep things simple .

Offline L.H. Smoke Pole

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Re: Yardage/Accuracy. Barrel Length and Twist.
« Reply #27 on: March 12, 2024, 07:20:42 PM »
J.M Browning I agree that one needs to work on their rifle, shot, load patch practice ect...
But to me  I'm looking for say a combination, or a setup so to speak like a .54 caliber 42" barrel.
I realize the variables with in those parameters, and the rest is up to me, my ability to shoot.

That being said I'm not buying a .32 squirrel rifle in hopes to shoot well enough to hunt Elk with it one day.
I want to know what's going to do the job, the rest I'll have to work on.

Offline Daryl

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Re: Yardage/Accuracy. Barrel Length and Twist.
« Reply #28 on: March 12, 2024, 08:18:15 PM »
Shooting longer ranges, accurately, cannot be done reliably, without the proper sighting equipment, imho.
Here is an express sight, similar to the one on my rifle, but as received, not "filed in" for specific ranges.
Brownell's is where I bought mine, in 1986. AFAIK, they still sell them.




Here is the rear sight on Taylor's Joseph Lang rifle, built around 1853.



Daryl

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Offline L.H. Smoke Pole

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Re: Yardage/Accuracy. Barrel Length and Twist.
« Reply #29 on: March 12, 2024, 08:24:00 PM »
Thanks Daryl, I will look those up.


Offline L.H. Smoke Pole

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Re: Yardage/Accuracy. Barrel Length and Twist.
« Reply #31 on: March 13, 2024, 05:10:21 AM »
Thanks Recurve, was having trouble finding them.
Do you know what the 3 leaf sight is for yardage?.

Offline smylee grouch

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Re: Yardage/Accuracy. Barrel Length and Twist.
« Reply #32 on: March 13, 2024, 05:42:33 AM »
I think you will have to file each leaf down to the yardage you want AFTER you find your best load.  ;)

Offline L.H. Smoke Pole

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Re: Yardage/Accuracy. Barrel Length and Twist.
« Reply #33 on: March 13, 2024, 06:01:12 AM »
Sure I understand that, but they must have made them with a yardage in mind.
I just couldn't tell if if there were any numbers on them from the photos.

Online rich pierce

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Re: Yardage/Accuracy. Barrel Length and Twist.
« Reply #34 on: March 13, 2024, 03:37:47 PM »
Sure I understand that, but they must have made them with a yardage in mind.
I just couldn't tell if if there were any numbers on them from the photos.

No, there is no preset because barrels come in many configurations and everyone develops their own loads with a muzzleloader. This is not an acccessory for a standard “model” of gun.
Andover, Vermont

Offline L.H. Smoke Pole

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Re: Yardage/Accuracy. Barrel Length and Twist.
« Reply #35 on: March 13, 2024, 05:04:54 PM »
OH, OK, Thanks Rich

Offline Mike Brooks

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Re: Yardage/Accuracy. Barrel Length and Twist.
« Reply #36 on: March 13, 2024, 05:24:33 PM »
OK, let's try this, this way.....

how many of you guy's feel the capability to shoot beyond 100 yards.
anyone shoot further than 100, 200, or more.

If so, what are you using to achieve this distance.

Accuracy is hitting the target/ subject you're aiming at with proficiency
so in this case I'm trying to find out what is the capability of this rifle
.54 Caliber 42" barrel
I would have to have peeps or a scope to shoot accurately at that distance. It has nothing to do with caliber , twist or barrel length. I don't see well enough to shoot at that distance anymore.
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Offline L.H. Smoke Pole

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Re: Yardage/Accuracy. Barrel Length and Twist.
« Reply #37 on: March 13, 2024, 06:14:22 PM »
I understand what you're stating about your eye sight, but to state that  barrel length load twist ect has nothing to do with it I can not agree with.
Like saying it doesn't mater which motor I use  to drag race.

Online rich pierce

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Re: Yardage/Accuracy. Barrel Length and Twist.
« Reply #38 on: March 13, 2024, 06:20:44 PM »
For deer, I’d need a rest and a standing broadside deer to feel confident. Beyond that, I’d need to practice more at 125 yards to take shots at that range and be very sure of the distance. Because of velocity and ballistics of round balls in a muzzleloader, being off by 30-40 yards could lead to a badly placed shot. I once shot a deer at 130 yards over snow in an open field because she looked so clear and large, I thought it was 100 yards. Follow up shot required.
Andover, Vermont

Offline Daryl

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Re: Yardage/Accuracy. Barrel Length and Twist.
« Reply #39 on: March 13, 2024, 06:49:42 PM »
I understand what you're stating about your eye sight, but to state that  barrel length load twist ect has nothing to do with it I can not agree with.
Like saying it doesn't mater which motor I use  to drag race.

You are talking about accuracy potential.  What criteria gives the VERY BEST POTENTIAL for accurate shooting at longer ranges.  Seems to me, the bench-rest .69 calibre muzzleloading
underhammer heavy rifles used with false muzzles and powder charges up to 300gr. have the best potential to shoot with the best accuracy at longer ranges, 200yards and beyond.
My own hunting rifle's accuracy remained the same with power charges up to 200gr. I did not test for accuracy beyond that, and settled on 165gr. as the most accurate load for the rifle.
That was back in 1986 when the rifle was built.  When shooting the 200yard match I noted on page 1 of this thread, I found that 140gr. of this newer GOEX gave me the same accuracy
as the older powder produced, but with 165gr.
I do not know the rate of twist of those benchrest rifles in .69 calibre. I would suggest somewhere in the 90" rate of twist range. This rifling would require more powder than would be comfortable
in a sporting rifle imho, to give their BEST accuracy.
Daryl

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Offline Dphariss

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Re: Yardage/Accuracy. Barrel Length and Twist.
« Reply #40 on: March 15, 2024, 06:59:14 PM »
Not stating that I'm going hunting for 400 yards out.
Again just trying to learn what these are capable pf doing.
Been Hunting and shooting for over 50 years, I don't take a shot unless I know it's going to drop where I shot it, or pretty close by.

Dropping a deer in its tracks generally requires at shock to or interruption of the nervous system. Sir William Drummond Stewart reported that Mule Deer were harder to stop with his 20 bore rifle (a Manton IIRC) than an Elk. He also stated he killed more game with less lead than any rifle at Rendezvous. But he might not have been as hung over either. In my experience shot  placement trumps caliber.
It takes an experienced ML shooter to kill past 120 yards with traditional ML of 50-54 caliber. And wind can be a serious drawback to this. I seldom shoot at game standing if I can avoid it. Caliber depends of the game hunted. 50 cal is near perfect for deer and will kill larger animals but for Elk, for example, I like something bigger. But few American traditional stock designs after 1790-1800 are good for bores over 54. Some of the early large buttplate rifles are good. A carry over from the large bore German rifles.
Twist? I suspect that an honest look at original American rifles will show them to be 48” and for “American” calibers this, all comments aside,  is a good twist for a PRB. Daryl has proven that even a 69 caliber does not need a 72” twist if I recall the twist rate correctly. Still a round ball will stabilize and shoot very well at low rotational speeds. I have a 62 caliber barrel with a 48 twist that I should have tested for patch integrity before I cut 2 pistol barrels off it. But I got lazy…. The typical Kentucky generally had a “4 foot” barrel. Something in the 42” plus range. The Barnett, Wilson and Grice trade rifles imported for use by the British Indian allies during the Revolution had barrels in the 43-46” length and one turn in the barrel length according to DeWitt Bailey in “British Military Flintlock Rifles”.
I have a 30” 8 groove .67 caliber barrel, .008 deep, narrow lands. And it shows abrading of the patch at the lands but they do not fail. This is with 140gr of ff Swiss. The thing about larger RBs is they have a lot of rotational inertia so if twisted too fast with a high acceleration rate the patch may (will) fail. I think if this rifle .010-.012” grooves it would be better in regard to the patches as would a 10 or 12 groove.  But I cannot imagine it being more accurate.
I have a 66” twist 54 Douglas that shot into 6” at 200 yards 5-6 shots with a peep sight shooting from a lawn chair and a pickup tailgate for a rest.
Remember that in testing by the British Army in Feb 1800 the Baker proved the most accurate at 300 yards. It had a twist  close to 10 feet and was a .65 caliber in this case. There was a mistaken belief by some that the slower twist would give better velocity. Not sure this would stand a modern test. And Europe at least and in Britain in many cases it was thought proper to make the rifling 1 turn in the length of the barrel even after the Bakers adoption. This continued until the end of the ML rifle according to Forsythe in “The Sporting Rifle and Its Projectiles”. They even developed the 2 groove barrel and belted ball to allow heavier charges with the fast twist. The use of fast twists in “standard” rifling forms resulted in many hunters in Africa and India using smoothbores since they could not get rifle accuracy from a fast twist rifle (the rifles used generally had barrels under 30”) at the velocity for the needed penetration on large dangerous game. But in England they were generally loading charges more like that used in a shotgun and the fast twist was OK.
If I were going to shoot to 200 yards in a rest match I would want a tight ball fit and a good charge of powder. Larger balls 66-72, have a better BC and will buck the wind slightly better than a 54 would but they will all require a number of wind flags to make a good score. Even really large RB like a 4 bore will likely have a BC that starts with a .1 at best. And wind drift, from what I have read, is the result of the TIME the bullet loses going to the target compared to shooting it the same distance in a vacuum. And RBs balls lose a lot of time with an atmosphere.
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Offline Daryl

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Re: Yardage/Accuracy. Barrel Length and Twist.
« Reply #41 on: March 15, 2024, 09:32:04 PM »
Years ago, Taylor built a huge underhammer cap-lock gun for a fellow. It had a 1" bore (4 bore) and was smooth inside and octagonal. I don't know where the barrel came from, but this 51 pound gun looked just like a Billinghurst or Werner U/H match rifle of the later 1800's.
It was not rifled. We shot it at the 300 meter range at the club and it appeared were were able to get about a 2 1/2' to 3' "group"/Pattern. It moved a lot of dirt, each shot.
The gun recoiled 12" when it went off. Did not matter how much "shoulder" you put into it, it moved 12" each time. I think were were shooting something like 400gr. of powder.
We did not shoot it standing. ;)
The barrel was a good 2 1/2" across the flats. I have a picture of it, but that would not be allowed here.
The larger the bore, the better potential in the gun for longer range accuracy.
Daryl

"a gun without hammers is like a spaniel without ears" King George V

Offline Dphariss

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Re: Yardage/Accuracy. Barrel Length and Twist.
« Reply #42 on: March 24, 2024, 05:29:37 PM »
If I have to take a shot at an elk or a deer with a muzzleloader over 50 yards I feel I'm doing a lousy job of hunting.
Shortest shot on elk 20 yards, longest 95 yards., average out of 8 is 40 yards. All with 54 calibers both cap and flint 95 grain 2f with the flint and 100 grains 2f with the cap. I've shot deer with a variety of calibers from .45 to .61, longest shot was an Eastern whitetail at 90 yards shortest was about 30 yards.
Don't really need a bench accuracy capable rifle to kill game. A rifle capable of keeping the ball in a 6 inch circle of a rest, is more than adequate.
The question is not the rifle but the shooter.
Depends on where you live/hunt.








« Last Edit: March 24, 2024, 05:49:51 PM by Dphariss »
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Offline Dphariss

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Re: Yardage/Accuracy. Barrel Length and Twist.
« Reply #43 on: March 24, 2024, 05:49:08 PM »
Dang hit the wrong button. I have walked to within 20 yards of bedded whitetails, 2 years ago and shot one. I have shot deer pretty close and I have killed deer past 120 yards on rare occasion. Antelope? You can look at them with binos from a mile away and see them looking back at you. If you get a 50 yards shot you know how to use terrain and/or you got lucky.  The Antelope phot was the day I missed one. The grass , I was prone or sitting don’t remember which and I goofed to hold looking through and over the grass. Should have held down IN the grass that covered most of his chest. I have stalked and shot mule deer at 50-60 yards or less using terrain. Once “walking” on my knees in about 14” of snow 100 yards or so to stay under the crest. I hunt wide open prairie to brushy creek bottoms to timbered and “timber locked” mountains. Fresh snow walked within 20 yards of a cow elk but they had changes the season that year and I could not shoot a cow where I was >:(. Did this at least 4 times all less than 50 yards over the years but could not see the bull in the timber if there was one. But sometimes they hear you coming and fade. I did stalk and kill a cow at about 60+ yards in the timber. If you hunt in the West you need to sight your ML for 1” high at 100 yards and shoot about 1/2 ball weight of powder in a 50-54. This will give you a point blank of about 120 yards. In the East things are different for the most part  and ranges are closer.
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Offline Daryl

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Re: Yardage/Accuracy. Barrel Length and Twist.
« Reply #44 on: March 25, 2024, 02:08:02 AM »
Antelope? You can look at them with binos from a mile away and see them looking back at you. If you get a 50 yards shot you know how to use terrain and/or you got lucky.

Same with sheep here.
Up here, this is moose country. At times you can call them in to within 10 yards, other times, it's a 120 yard shot - or 170(lasered) yards by a fellow with a .54.
1 shot was all it took and believe me, it was an exceptionally lucky shot as the hunter could not put 5 consecutive shots onto a target at 100yards, from a rest.
I was not guiding him or he wouldn't have made an attempt. The ball passed through the heart and both lungs, lodging against the hide on the far side. Lucky hit.
But, this shows the round ball is not as useless as some people think.




Daryl

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Offline Dphariss

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Re: Yardage/Accuracy. Barrel Length and Twist.
« Reply #45 on: March 25, 2024, 06:58:42 AM »
As Daryl mentioned the RB is often unappreciated. “Moderns” are too impressed with elongated projectiles.  They have their purposes. But not in a traditional ML for hunting. If we read in the right places. Taylor, Forsythe, W.W. Greener, Baker and Selous for that matter. We find that conicals were tried and pretty much abandoned for hunting. Sir Samuel Baker had a bullet made for his 6 bore belted ball “stopping” rifle and it got him into such “scrapes” (with African Elephant) that he abandoned it with a ball the rifle “never failed to floor a charging Elephant”. Selous, who was using smooth 4 bores that were far too light to hunt Elephant stated that while he wished he had never used them due to their recoil effecting his shooting all his life, stated that “the drove better than anything he ever used”. Taylor in “Pondoro” tells of killing 13 “good bulls (African Elephant) and some Rhino with a 10 bore smooth, hardened balls and 167 gr of powder. He was an ivory hunter and his ammunition for his modern rifles was misdirected and he borrowed the 10 bore so he could kill enough ivory to keep himself alive. He said he would not have wanted to face a charge with the 10 bore but that he never lost an animal he shot with it. If a 10 bore, 75 caliber IIRC, will reliably kill a 8000-10000 pound animal with a chest shot how can a 50 or 54 caliber ball fail on something  weighing 5 or 10% of that weight?
But the advent of the TC Hawken and the “Maxi-Ball” resulted in all sorts of trash being written by “gun writers” who really only knew that TC bought advertising, telling everyone how useless the RB was.
What people need to understand is explained by Forsythe. A hunting rifle must have sufficient accruracy, a flat trajectory and sufficient penetration to kill. The round ball, of suitable size, driven by something around 50% of ball weight does all these things very well. Within its range. Oh! Bullet energy, gun writes LOVE this. Its meaningless at BP velocities.
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Offline T.C.Albert

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Re: Yardage/Accuracy. Barrel Length and Twist.
« Reply #46 on: March 25, 2024, 03:30:12 PM »
LHSP, I guess experience tells the tale. Consider what ranges you have taken game at with your muzzleloaders so far? That would be a good place to start building on maybe.
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Offline smylee grouch

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Re: Yardage/Accuracy. Barrel Length and Twist.
« Reply #47 on: March 25, 2024, 05:59:37 PM »
When it comes to bullet performance on game the round ball is vastly underrated as others have just said. The round ball will generally track straight barring any big bone interaction. In over 50 years of hunting with the round ball I have seen many stem to stern shots from close and long range on large bodied northern deer. Also one 400 lb. Fall Bear. Almost all the armchair experts are trying to sell a product or article and few have ever shot a round ball gun much less harvested \killed any game with one.

Offline hanshi

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Re: Yardage/Accuracy. Barrel Length and Twist.
« Reply #48 on: March 27, 2024, 11:02:36 PM »
Where one hunts usually makes a major difference.  Years ago when I was an avid hunter down in my native Georgia shots at deer were usually necessarily close with an average distance of less  than 30 yards.  Some actual kills were as close as 6 feet or so.  The accuracy needed for the brushy woods I hunted was modest indeed. 

There was a huge hay field on the farm I hunted and deer normally wandered into the open just before dusk.  The only deer I've killed at 100 (+) yards were the two I dropped while stationed behind a stack of hay bales "conveniently" located out in the open.  I had two flintlock .50s sighted in 2" high at 50 yards.  This worked well in the woods and I knew how much the ball would drop at the distances then available.  Here, accuracy became a bit more important.  A .490" patched ball over 100 grains of 3F shot like a tack driver at the ranges I tested it.  And I've never bothered to test the load at more than 100 yards, my imposed limit back then.  I had good eyes then and would never attempt such shots today if I still hunted deer, which I don't.  Ball performance at that extended range was excellent on both animals with complete penetration and neither deer gave more than three or four leaps before they fell.  The simple patched round ball is an astonishing hunting projectile that needs no excuse or apology as to its effectiveness.
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