Agreed.For bench rest and long range shooting, yup, it's a thing. For casual shooting, not so much. I made one from a piece of brake line covered by heat shrink tubing. I see no change in accuracy in the gun I made it for but, there are other variables still in play with that gun.
Because bench shooters are their own breed and fussy beyond belief. If any idea hints at improved accuracy, they do it.Interesting, do the bench shooters say why the use them?
I do so often. Started out using a drop tube but quit using one when I had the same results using a funnel which delivered the powder to the breech in a small column and kept grains of powder from adhering to the bore, where it could rip the paper patch as the bullet is loaded.Agreed.
IF I was shooting a caplock in a 40 Rods Distance Match ( 220 yards ), as they did when the book The Muzzle Loading Cap-Lock Rifle was penned, I'd use one. When it comes to punching targets out to 100 yards or turning a deer into venison, nope.
LD
I've always read, like for Schuetzen BP cartridge loads, that the purpose was to make a consistent and packed (settled) powder column.I have read the long distance black powder shooters use the drop tube because it delivers the charge cleanly to the breach area.
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