Greetings brubincam,
To begin with, there is no certainity that my loading data will be SAFE or ACCURATE in any other rifle. Therfore, what information is listed here is for my own personal use and is not recommended for anybody else to use.
Next, I do not have the equipment or knowledge to post photographs on the forum or any other place on the internet for that matter. Perhaps in a few weeks or so when a friend who is a computer professional comes to visit we can change that.
As far as an extremely accurate rifle(s) I will begin by discussing first the following rifle.
(1) A Kenneth Briesen bench rest rifle - Briesen under hammer action with Briesen Barrel 42 inchs long, 2-1/8 inch diameter with false muzzle and stainless steel sealed ignitor.
Total weight or the rifle is 51 pounds. (I told you it was a bench rest rifle).
Caliber is 58 with 1-72 rifling twist
Loading data is .575 diameter round ball, .018 inch Teflon coated pillow tick patching of Eygptian cotton, 180-200 grains of 2FF Goex Black Powder, and a RWS CAP
Sights are a Redfield Palma aperature rearsight and a Redfied Big Bore Globe/aperature front sight.
This rifle will shoot 5 or 10 balls into one big hole measuring 0.75 inch or smaller at 25 yards.
At 50 yards, this same rifle will consistently shoot a 50 with X's on the OFFICAL NMLRA 50 YARD 6 BULL, 8 RING ROUND BALL RIFLE TARGET,
The X ring measures 3/8 inch in diameter, and the 10 ring measures 7/8 inch in diameter. NMLRA AND TMLRA rules require the bullet hole to cut AT LEAST half way through the scoring ring to count the next higher scoring ring.
Just touching the scoring ring does not count.
Scores at 100 yards run from 45 to 50 with X's. THE X ring is 1 inch in diameter, the 10 ring is 2 inches, the 9 ring is 4 inchs, and the 8 ring is 6 inchs in diameter.
Scoring high at 200 yards is much more difficult. A score of 40 is good, and will not throw you out of the aggregate, but probably not win a 1st, 2nd, or 3rd place individual target metal for you. A 45 plus with X's is needed to garner one of the top 3 metal places on the 200 yard bench rest target.
When I read the wind correctly, a score of 45 to 48 is the averag.
The NMLRA OFFICAL 200 YARD TARGET X ring is 2 inchs in diameter, while the 10, 9, and 8 rings are respectfully 4, 8, and 12 inches in diameter.
This pretty well defines one of my extremely accurate rifles. I will describe afew others later.
For those who think this level of accuracy is not paticularly high for a round ball rifle, I respectfully suggest you take your favorite rifle to the range and shoot five of each target (to determine an average) No shot can be claimed as a flyer; all five 5 shots must count, and conditions are not an alibi
I will continue later with descriptions of some of my other "extremely accurate" round ball rifles.
Best regards and good shooting,
John L. Hinnant
to be continued.......