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70 Cal.
- Joined
- Apr 2, 2009
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When i started in the early 70's, the general rule of thumb was bore caliber in grains of powder, ie 50 caliber, 50 grains. for targets, no more than twice that for hunting. I found for hunting with nearly all my guns, regardless of caliber, that 70 to 80 grains was more then adequate.
It takes some practice to develop a consistent loading technique. Just different pressure when seating the ball from shot to shot can change point of impact. Many folks say it is unnecessary, but I found it depends more on the bore, are you wiping the bore between shots? Keeping the fouling in the bore consistent also makes a difference. At a target session, after I fire a shot, I use one wet patch not dripping wet but almost, up and down several times followed by a dry one up and down several times and then another dry one up and down.
When you pour the powder down the bore do you slap the gun on the side to settle the powder into the flash channel. Target competitors get fairly anal about following the same routine each time. The old joke was that if you farted between two shots, your score would be off if you didn't do it between every shot.
The difference could be hang fires. Some are almost imperceptable but make a difference. And lastly pay double attention to your follow through. Some folks don't realize it but flinch a bit even with a percussion gun.
It takes some practice to develop a consistent loading technique. Just different pressure when seating the ball from shot to shot can change point of impact. Many folks say it is unnecessary, but I found it depends more on the bore, are you wiping the bore between shots? Keeping the fouling in the bore consistent also makes a difference. At a target session, after I fire a shot, I use one wet patch not dripping wet but almost, up and down several times followed by a dry one up and down several times and then another dry one up and down.
When you pour the powder down the bore do you slap the gun on the side to settle the powder into the flash channel. Target competitors get fairly anal about following the same routine each time. The old joke was that if you farted between two shots, your score would be off if you didn't do it between every shot.
The difference could be hang fires. Some are almost imperceptable but make a difference. And lastly pay double attention to your follow through. Some folks don't realize it but flinch a bit even with a percussion gun.