Gollywomper
36 Cl.
What has been your experience on max effective range for a ML on elk?
50 and 54 cal with PRB.
50 and 54 cal with PRB.
Check out posts by @Idaho Ron, though he is a proponent of paperpatched conicals elk hunting, not roundballs.What has been your experience on max effective range for a ML on elk?
50 and 54 cal with PRB.
Yes. I am just curious to what others have seen. I am just getting started into ML. I am going to see how Hornady PA conical fly out of my slow twist 50 cal barrel.The only one I’ve shot with a round ball was a .490 at 50 yards. The ball lodged under the hide on the opposite side. It went through a rib and a lot of shoulder meat but no big bone.
I have a feeling that the rb will penetrate less the further out you get. They don’t expand a whole lot so higher velocity will probably mean more penetration. I still feel confident you could kill an elk at 100 yards if you don’t hit any major bones. What concerns me more than anything is the lack of blood on the ground with only an entrance hole.
This is the whole thought process that has me looking into conicals or something bigger than a .50 rb.
Curious, is one better for taking elk at long range?
I asked myself the same question not too long ago, so I went through the forum reading people's experiences to get a guesstimate on energy needed for elk with PRB, it came out to 600ftlbs on impact regardless of caliber. That makes 54 about a 75yds gun, 50 a 50yds, and 45 about a 35-40yds. Me personally I wouldn't hesitate to take an elk with a hard cast 12bhn+ round ball at 50yds and in with either a 50 or 45What has been your experience on max effective range for a ML on elk?
50 and 54 cal with PRB.
This cracked me up lmao.50 cal RBs are for squirrel hunting at 30 yds
Me too "Shooting & Loading Opinions Galore !!!
I knew nothing when I started shooting & collecting antique firearms as a young history buff.
Six plus decades of active study & collecting, competing & hunting with a wide variety of primarily original English & European flint & percussion firearms developed by the worlds master gunmakers who set world records for long range accuracy,, they taught the world about any successes in accuracy we achieve today.
Early master English & European gunmakers who immigrated to America's colonies taught most of our early gunakers how to build.
*The vast majority of the large bore rifled long guns i've owned & competed that were developed to shoot patched round balls usually feature rifling with one turn in length of the barrel & the rifling depth has varied from .012 to .018 deep.
The above large bore rifles generally had 2-3 leaf rear sights & required powder charges of approximately 80 gr of 2F to provide exceptional long range accuracy.
Everyone has their favorite style & period firearm. I tended to gravitate mostly to big bore Jaegers & English & French sporting rifle & pistols because of their quality workmanship, light weight & unbeatable accuracy if I loaded properly & did my part.
Rifling depth is usually deeper in all earlier vintage PRB firearms, I suspect to utilize the thicker fabrics mfg of that era or use of buckskin as patching material.
I have recovered original flint & percussion era round ball firearms that were still loaded with buckskin used as patching.
* Early firearms that were designed to primarily shoot projectiles generally featured much shallower depth rifling with a faster twist.
The rifling depth & rate of twist on Whitworth & belted ball rifles I've owned & shot are exceptions.
** Powder charges:
Almost without exception all of the above 'original' rifles including the Whitworth were designed to require much less of a powder charge to obtain suburb long range accuracy.
Relic shooter,, at 81 I'm now a relic
"Me too" - A Relic Shooter,, at 83 I'm now a relicRelic shooter,, at 81 I'm now a relic
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