• Friends, our 2nd Amendment rights are always under attack and the NRA has been a constant for decades in helping fight that fight.

    We have partnered with the NRA to offer you a discount on membership and Muzzleloading Forum gets a small percentage too of each membership, so you are supporting both the NRA and us.

    Use this link to sign up please; https://membership.nra.org/recruiters/join/XR045103

Accuracy Help

Muzzleloading Forum

Help Support Muzzleloading Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
Yes, you will receive many suggestions. You are starting with a clean bore I’m sure. When you swab the bore do you notice any roughness at all anywhere in the barrel? Feeling for a spot tat might have a bit of pitting. This may or may not be there. If so a bit of gas might leak at this spot and affect accuracy.
I’m guessing the bore is in good shape.
i swab between shots. Some think this is unnecessary but I do it. Many still do it.
You want the consistency between each shot as you can get.
With each shot the pressure changes as each shot deposits a little more fouling. So I swab to get the best consistency between each shot.
Change you powder load. I was taught to try 5 grain increments but you can try 10 if you choose. Might try a different patch thickness.
Each piece likes its own diet.
Some things to think about
 
Thank you all for you great suggestion. I'm heading to Dixons now to pick up a few things and then it's try out as much of the advice I can. Thank you all for your help.
Phil
 
Talk to Greg while there. He might give some more advice.
Your lock time looked pretty good, your groups sound ok.
Have patience as you "dial in" your load, the process is the fun part. "Good enough" for a time is ok, then come back to it and mess with a variable. Sometimes we just need range time to work on ourselves without working on the weapon.
 
First make sure you have a target that lines up with your sights. I prefer 1"wide X 12" vertical line with a 1" X 12" horizontal one on white paper. Make the lines a bright color so your sights don't get lost in them such as a black. Clear crisp target helps.
This piece of advice is something I wish I heard years ago. Thank you
 
About 150 shoots through my new to me, Flintlock Lyman trade gun 50 cal. Been shooting 50gr 2F, PRB, 12,15,18, 20 thou. pre lubed patches and my best accuracy has been 5 shoots about 1.75 inches at 30 yds and that was with the 15 thou. patches witch surprised me as I thought they would be with the thicker patch. A lot of those shoots where trying to figure out a flintlock and now that is going off pretty regular I would like better groups. Was thinking start going up on the powder and was wondering what else I may try and just what should I expect out of the gun and 74 yr young eyes.
Phil
that eye thing stinks, still better to have old eyes than die young with good eyes. Muzzleloaders are a bit different than centerfire in that they have much longer barrels , slower lock times and lower velocity. All this combines to make the time from pulling the trigger to the ball exiting the barrel much longer. Great shooters have great follow through. Keep your hold, cheek weld, breath, sight picture consistently focused until the rifle’s recoil is completely ended. It might help. And, as a bonus, it will improve all of your shooting. If you’re already doing this experiment with different loads/patches/etc in 3-5 round groups from a clean barrel. Find what your rifle likes to eat, then write it down so you don’t forget it.Good luck!
 
Those size groups offhand are just great. With age it has gone away for me. I agree that if you hsve a RB twist, up the charge, miner never did s thing until I got to 90 gr.
 

Latest posts

Back
Top