Jarikeen said:
I've had the opporuntiy to shoot a couple of different cal. muzzleloaders from a .45 Kentucky to a .75 brown bess. A lot of fun. I was looking towards a .45 cal to purchase but was told that a .50 cal and up tend to be more accurate. Is this true for both rifle and smoothbore?
Regards Peter
Hi Jarikeen,
I'm not convinced that any particular caliber is more accurate than another. Big difference in accuracy between a rifle and smoothbore. Rifles are accurate out to 200 yards or more. Smoothbore accuracy is tough much beyond about 60 yards with a tight, patched ball. Loosely patched ball, better keep that smoothbore shooting within 50 yards and don't expect good groups.
Most of the folks I run into with rifles are .50 or .54 caliber, rather than the .45 or .40 caliber. I think there's a couple of reasons for that. One is that some states require at least .45 caliber to hunt deer with a muzzleloader. Because you are shooting at lower velocities than modern centerfires, the larger caliber heavier patched balls will deliver more energy to the target within about 100 yards, where most muzzleloading shots are made.
Another reason is that I tend to gather round with a bunch of Revolutionary War reenactors, and .50-.54 caliber is more representative of the time period. When the Jaeger rifles came over from Germany, they were short, thick, and typically around .62 cal. As the American long rifle developed, the calibers kept shrinking. Somewhere around .50-.54 cal was typical during the revolutionary war. After the rev war as long rifles were being made in what is known as the "golden age", calibers dropped down to .45 and .40. Smaller calibers used less powder, more balls could be made from less lead, and the guns started to be made with more delicate and sweeping architecture. The classic crescent-shaped and thin butt started showing up on stocks. Squirrel guns with calibers in the .30's started to become popular for smaller game.
Then as the westward movement started, the need for larger bores for big game (deer, elk, buffalo) drove the calibers up again. Riding a horse across the plains instead of walking in mocassins through a hardwood forest made the use of the shorter, stockier, plains-style rifles more popular. Next thing you know they started putting caplocks on the dern things.
Notice I gave approximations for the calibers. Barrels that were made in the US were hammer welded around a mandrel and their just wasn't the consisency of size or interchangability that came with later with the industrial age. Because of that calibers would vary from maker to maker and sometimes from barrel to barrel, new rifles were supplied with a "bag mold" that would cast the appropriate sized ball for that particular rifle.
So in a nutshell, check your regs if you want to use the rifle for hunting, and check your styles if you want to use it for reenacting. It's less expensive to shoot the smaller calibers, but the larger calibers deliver more energy for big game. Once you get a rifle, be aware that regardless of caliber, you will need to spend time working up a load and prime that your particular rifle likes. Good news is that once you find it, your rifle will consistently shoot the same time after time.
:yakyak: :yakyak:
Enjoy!
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Twisted_1in66 :thumbsup: