Have you read The Sporting Rifle and Its Projectiles by Forsyth? I ask as Forsyth rifling is not simply a 1:104 twist. Forsyth rifling has much wider grooves than lands, and the grooves are shallow while the lands are sharp.
From Forsyth's Book:
P. 68
"I have found that a 14 gauge barrel rifled at the rate of one turn in 8 ft. 8 in., [1:104] if correctly made, will throw a plain spherical ball with sufficient accuracy for all practical purposes up to 200 or 250 yards. A rifle on this principle requires the grooves to be cut very shallow and broad, and the lands very narrow, almost knife-edged; the ball should just touch the lands, and no more, and the hold on the grooves is given by a very substantial patch; "
P.154
"...a 14-gauge barrel rifled at the rate of one turn in 8 ft. 8 in., may be depended upon up to 200 or 250 yards. It is evident that with this raate of spiral, the ball requires but a very slight hold on the grooves to induce it to follow the sweep of the rifling, and in practice, I have found, that the lead need not even be indented by the lands at all, a substantial patch giving the spiral motion quite as effectually. ... The tendency to strip, then, in such rifles being very small, the grooves may, and should be made as shallow as possible; seven or eight grooves very broad and shallow, the lands being almost knife-edged, having been found to answer best with these rifles."
Forsyth talks about loads for the 14 gauge rifle that he uses as an example, [.69 ..., his "minimum" for deer sized game] of 110 to 135 grains. So I wonder if the lands compared to the grooves in your barrel don't match what Forsyth specified, and thus may not work with his heavy loads out to the intended distances?
:idunno:
Forsyth though informing the reader that a barrel may be made for the shooter to be able to reach 200 to 250 yards with accuracy for "practical purposes"... mentions that he, himself, didn't shoot beyond 100 yards.
LD