I have a .50 cal Ped. Traditional Hawken Hunter with a 1 in 24 twist Will I be able to get any decent accuracy with PRB or am I gonna have to use conicals?
100% Absolutely way too fast for PRB’s I’d think. I just got a .50 1:24 specifically for shooting conicals.1:24 is way too fast for PRB.
I never knew the original Jaegers had that fast of a twist. That's interesting. Also makes sense now why the rifling grooves were so deep. To bite into a belted ball or a thick patching material.Bear in mind that Jäger Rifles had a twist rate of one turn in the barrel length. These were short barreled rifles with barrels of 24 to 30" in length. When Pedersoli marketed their Jäger rifle, it has a twist rate of 1 in 24" and can achieve reasonable round ball accuracy and take chamois from one Alpine ridge to the next.
THISYou will not know for sure until you shoot it. Always consider many of ‘rules’ we hear about in muzzleloading to be more like ‘guidelines’ rather than absolutes.
For what it's worth, the recommended bullet for Pedersoli's 1:24 twist barrel Jaeger, from Pedersoli's website, is a .535 patched round ball.I have a .50 cal Ped. Traditional Hawken Hunter with a 1 in 24 twist Will I be able to get any decent accuracy with PRB or am I gonna have to use conicals?
I have several books on M.L. rifles/pistols. I used them to guide me on my M.L. trail. I found them to be as accurate with their information as any one would want. The exact load in these books was what has worked for me. I could have wasted a lot of time trying to figure out what a particular load for a particular cal. would work best but my black powder handbook saved me a lot of time. One of the best books was Sam Fadala,s ,"Black Powder Handbook" It has been dead on with the information I used from his book. I also went down the chasing my tail road when I first started shooting these rifles and didn't have any books on the subject. Ironically my choosen loads were exactly the same as I found in the book. With all this said there are reason for inaccurate rifles other than the load but if the rifle doesn't have a physical problem I go by the book.You will not know for sure until you shoot it. Always consider many of ‘rules’ we hear about in muzzleloading to be more like ‘guidelines’ rather than absolutes.
Lots of folks that will tell you something won't work, and have never even tried it themselves, they just look at the numbers and say that's impossible.
Physics don't apply in my countyYeah, except there are laws of physics that apply.
If 1:24 worked great for PRB then folks who make their living understanding internal ballistics wouldn't suggest the much slower twists would they. Every RB rifle would be 1:24 wouldn't it.
Really interesting, thanks for your post.For what it's worth, the recommended bullet for Pedersoli's 1:24 twist barrel Jaeger, from Pedersoli's website, is a .535 patched round ball.
I'd doubt that they would recommend a round ball if it got less performance than a conical, especially when they sell conicals too.
Now their barrel isn't your barrel, but it does show that somebody whose profit margin is based on results thinks their 1:24 twist barrel should shoot round ball.
LD
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