I have a pair of Kodiak Safari .72-caliber rifles, both of which are the "higher" grade and were manufactured within the last two years. One remains unfired - just in case they proved to be unsatisfactory.
1. I had a custom short conical bullet made to the specifications of my slugged barrels that will be used on flintlock English-style rifles. The bullets are cast 30:1. Because they have a slightly tapering series of driving bands, bullets also fit my Safaris.
2. I proved Safari #1 because the load range is significantly beyond Pedersoli's [attorney-mandated] recommended loading. I have a 30-grain range of FFg load options.
3. The initial load testing and work-up showed astonishingly good accuracy coupled with tight cone of fire at 25, 50, and 100 yards. I then had a simulated leather Pachmayr pad installed, length of pull adjusted, trigger job on a slightly creepy trigger - and a Brockman adjustable aperture sight installed at the barrels' breech. Pedersoli's middle rear sight was removed and holes plugged with screws.
3. Initial testting of gunsmithed rifle shows changes in cone of fire. As I type the rifle is satisfactory for deer/elk up to 85 yards. By the time season opens in Montana, the rifle will be satisfactory for any range at which I care to shoot - that is, up to 125 yards.
4. The downside to using the projectiles I prefer include: exceptionally heavy recoil; and knowledge than reloading in the field is infeasible for any sort of follow-up series of shots. If I don't bring the quarry down in two shots, subsequent shots will take several minutes to prepare. I don't consider this much of a downside, though. I created the .72s (specifically including the flintlocks being built) to be able to use on a once-in-a-lifetime hunt.
5. My shooting-hunting partner and I are beginning penetration testing and comparison with known rifle-ammuntion combinations. Initial testing shows Safari load to penetrate comparably with 45-70/425/1650 (WW heat treated to Brinnell 28) and not nearly as deeply as the same 45-70 load with bullet NOT heat treated. Heat treated bullet shattered while Safari bullet flattened, destroying tremendous area surrounding hole, then separated into two pieces. Eventually we will test Safari bullets 20:1 and 10:1. Safari's 30:1 bullet is tremendous overkill for anything in North America except, perhaps, Asian buffalo (in Tennessee??).
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My evaluation is that higher grade Kodiak rifles are surprisingly accurate out of the box. With work, and accepting that you CAN create distinct loads for each barrel (knowing that quick reloads ain't gonna happen) that will allow you to comfortably shoot at any range the sights allow.
You asked me what time it is, and I told you how the watch worked. . . . Sorry.
Hope this helps.