First: Remember that Dutch is/was a long time target shooter. Target shooters are looking for the Nth degree of accuracy from their rifles, considering their cleaning procedure between shots. Hunters rarely need that level of accuracy.
BrownBear's gun that would not fire accurately without first shooting off TWO blank charges- or starter loads-- reminds me of a gun I worked on several years ago. I found the bedding of the barrel and tang were wrong, and as soon as I fixed that, the gun shot well the first shot fired, and consecutive shots fired to the same POA.
There are lots of reasons that rifles won't shoot "Cold"; its up to the shooter- or with help from more experienced shooters and gunsmiths--- to figure out what that particular gun's problem IS.
A friend of mine fixed the rifle of another club member by simply loosening the tang screw on the gun. The owner had cranked it down too much, and it was causing fliers all over the target, with and without starter loads.
Another friend found his forestock had warped over the winter, when the gun set in a warm, dry trailer. His first shot went exactly to POA. The next shot was off the paper at 50 yards. He finally took a suggestion from someone to pull the keys on the forestock, and discovered the condition. Since it was a CVA rifle with two keys, he put the forward key into the stock to hold the barrel, and proceeded to shoot cloverleaf groups off the bench at 50 yards.
I have experiences several guns where the owner was not paying close attention to the ball sizes and patch thickness used. The patches showed burning and blow by. When we change either the patch thickness, or the ball diameter, or both, the gun shot to the same POA, and shot small groups again. The next time at the range with a "cold" gun, he found that the first shot fired to the same POI as all the rest, and stopped using "starter loads" to dirty his barrel. I made one fellow write down on the inside lid of his range box the ball diameter, and the Patch thickness he needed for that gun. He added his best powder charge, telling me he always forgot if he was loading 3Fg or 2Fg when he went to buy powder! :shocked2: He gave a group of us the usual comment about not understanding how important it is to use the correct thickness of patching material, and the correct lube! He had an "assortment" of .530" and .535" diameter balls in a bag in his range box, which we helped him sort out, and put in marked containers. :blah: :idunno: :surrender: :thumbsup: