When I had my Parker Hale 53 Enfield, using premade cartridges I could do four a minute and hit what I was aiming at . of course I was 30 years younger than now
It's absolutely doable but it does take practice
2 minutes, rapid fire, 6 shots, 1 miss at 50yds. Target score of 8. 3 basic hits=3 1 on card=2 1 on bicycle=3. I got in a hurry on the last shot and pulled it right of target.
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Somebody might actually try doing that and wake up with a bloody nose and a broken rifle laying across their faceThat's easy. just put three balls down the barrel!
So often that standard was to start with a loaded rifle or musket. With a Bess, I can do four in a minute IF you start the clock when my first ball goes downrange.I was curious what all you guys can do I know this is the old world gold standard I was trying it at the range with a 61 springfield and I could almost but not quite get there and it felt like I was flying impressive that these guys did it under fire reliably
Whitworth rifles are very cool how do you go about casting and sizing bullets for that i always wonderedShooting a Whitworth rifle, as I often do, can take thirty minutes of maybe more, by the time I've finished yakking to the usual gawpers who want to know
how you get a hexagonal bullet in there...
Happily, I'm not usually in a rush of any kind.
That part of the movie was inspired by two battles. First was the Battle of Cowpens (January 1781) where General Daniel Morgan had taken 600-men of General Greene's Continental army and 400 militia and headed northwest in North Carolina. British General Cornwallis split off a contingent of about 1,000 men under the infamous Banistre Tarleton to attack Morgan's Patriot force. Morgan got advance news of his approach and set up three lines of his troops. First line contained 150 riflemen sharpshooters. The second line was the Carolina militia, who were untested and expected to break and run easily, and hopefully draw the British into his trap. So Morgan went from campfire to campfire the night before talking to his men and telling the militia that he just needed two shots from them when the Brits were withing range and then they could fall back to the line behind them. The third line was composed entirely of battle-hardened Continental Line veterans.In the movie " Patriot" Mel Gibson ask is men to fire two shots before retreating. One man replied, " a lot can happen in the time it takes to fire two shots. His reply was" that's why I'm not asking you to shoot three! I couldn't imagine standing that close and letting guys shoot volleys at you while your reloading.
All such are under perfect conditions; not stressed or wounded, thirsty or under actual fire; it's something that people CAN do, but it's akin to changing a tire along side of a road, and changing a tire during a NASCAR race; training, perfect conditions and conditioning, etc., etc. Fun to do similar to the 75 yard Colt Navy .36 cal. "Wild Bill" shot.It takes a little practice but it isn't all that difficult. One needs to be organized, focused and familiar with their equipment. Hints: stick your bayonet in the ground in front of you and rest your rammer on it rather than return it, take the top flap of your cartridge box and tuck it under the waist belt so the box is always open, turn the top flap of the cap box over and tuck it in your belt, get a good shooting stance and don't move from it, focus on the targets and never look away. Of course it goes without saying you need a proper fitting minie and an excellent lube. Having someone shooting back at you might help too. There was (no longer shooting) a skirmisher that could consistently get off 4 aimed shots per minute and a majority of them were hits, one of the best shooters in the N-SSA. Hey, if I could do it a caveman probably could too.
That's real true, I broke a wooden one myself. Luckily didn't go through my hand and I learned to take short strokes with the ramrod (9" to 12" at a time) to seat the ball instead of trying to seat it with one or two stokes.If you are going to play with speed loading, use a steel rod or similar. I've seen broken ramrods through the hand too many times in the past 50 years. Always wood ramrods, of course, and usually an overexcited pilgrim.
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