Howdy folks,
My friend asked me to test fire his rifle with a .54 caliber, 42", octagon to round, Douglas barrel. He was having trouble with the accuracy, and wanted to see if I could find out what was wrong.
So at 25 yards, from a sandbagged rest position, I fired three shots of 3Fg Goex, using 50 grains of powder, and a .530 lead round ball made by Hornady, patched with .015 pillow ticking cut at the muzzle, and spit. Swab with damp patch between each shot. Loading was nice and snug, and akin to my other rifles.
Ignition was great, and the first three shots hit in a ragged hole just slightly right of the center line and about 3" high from the point of aim. So I adjusted the rear sight just a bit left, and shot #4 hit the center line, and equal in height to the first three.
Since one must use at least 60 grains of powder to legally hunt deer in my state, I upped the load to 60 grains, and the impact point moved up just a tad over shot #4...and I shot twice so I had a nice pair of holes from shots #5 and #6 touching, just slightly above shot #4.
OK so no worries so far... time to try 50 yards, which is where my friend had complained he saw problems.
So 60 grains of GOEX 3Fg at 50 yards, and the rest you know... WOW... the shots went to about 11 O'Clock from the bull and the group opened to 3". :shocked2:
So I went out and collected 5 patches, and they were intact, nice round black ring, but when I held them up to the sun, I saw tiny light areas ...tiny holes..., obviously from their being symetric spaced, they were from the rifling. In two of the five patches, it looked like only a quarter of the full circle had the tiny holes...wierd.
Is this enough "patch cutting" to explain the accuracy change from 25 to 50 yards?
In the past when I've had patches cut by the rifling, they were larger holes and very obvious, and also burned from the firing, but in this case the holes weren't burned as far as I could see, and weren't obvious except when exposed to a bright light passing through the cloth material.
So is it patch cutting or is there something else I might look for?
LD
My friend asked me to test fire his rifle with a .54 caliber, 42", octagon to round, Douglas barrel. He was having trouble with the accuracy, and wanted to see if I could find out what was wrong.
So at 25 yards, from a sandbagged rest position, I fired three shots of 3Fg Goex, using 50 grains of powder, and a .530 lead round ball made by Hornady, patched with .015 pillow ticking cut at the muzzle, and spit. Swab with damp patch between each shot. Loading was nice and snug, and akin to my other rifles.
Ignition was great, and the first three shots hit in a ragged hole just slightly right of the center line and about 3" high from the point of aim. So I adjusted the rear sight just a bit left, and shot #4 hit the center line, and equal in height to the first three.
Since one must use at least 60 grains of powder to legally hunt deer in my state, I upped the load to 60 grains, and the impact point moved up just a tad over shot #4...and I shot twice so I had a nice pair of holes from shots #5 and #6 touching, just slightly above shot #4.
OK so no worries so far... time to try 50 yards, which is where my friend had complained he saw problems.
So 60 grains of GOEX 3Fg at 50 yards, and the rest you know... WOW... the shots went to about 11 O'Clock from the bull and the group opened to 3". :shocked2:
So I went out and collected 5 patches, and they were intact, nice round black ring, but when I held them up to the sun, I saw tiny light areas ...tiny holes..., obviously from their being symetric spaced, they were from the rifling. In two of the five patches, it looked like only a quarter of the full circle had the tiny holes...wierd.
Is this enough "patch cutting" to explain the accuracy change from 25 to 50 yards?
In the past when I've had patches cut by the rifling, they were larger holes and very obvious, and also burned from the firing, but in this case the holes weren't burned as far as I could see, and weren't obvious except when exposed to a bright light passing through the cloth material.
So is it patch cutting or is there something else I might look for?
LD