Pope was not really muzzle loading for the most part of his shooting career but rather seating the bullet through a false muzzle into a breech-ed , charged case. He did use gain twist and choke. Pope by the way did not but choke into his barrel but instead lapped it into them. Pope also liked left hand pitch (he shot right handed) as it torqued the rifle into his cheek instead of away from it. By the way the torque direction is the same as the pitch direction, not opposite as some folks insist. The reason is because the bullet friction on the rifling pulls the barrel pitch with it as it goes up bore. Newtons third law does not apply as some folks think.I seem to remember that H M Pope often used gain twist, but don't remember if he also use a little muzzle choke. Some where there's a book on Pope barrels that might have some discussion. Mine is stored in a box someplace
rayb
I used the word choke in the last post but more correctly should have said taper. Pope actually made a set of graduated, tapered diameter bore slugs, one inch long which was fit to it's predetermined depth, this accomplished by lapping to fit depth not mechanically cutting it as some have said. Each slug a bit larger was fit to the added length of barrel until the whole interior had been tapered it's full length. The depth of lapped taper we are talking about here are very small and in the ten thousands range. Frequent, freshly pored laps will maintain sharp rifling profile ,contrary to what some believe.Pope was not really muzzle loading for the most part of his shooting career but rather seating the bullet through a false muzzle into a breech-ed , charged case. He did use gain twist and choke. Pope by the way did not but choke into his barrel but instead lapped it into them. Pope also liked left hand pitch (he shot right handed) as it torqued the rifle into his cheek instead of away from it. By the way the torque direction is the same as the pitch direction, not opposite as some folks insist. The reason is because the bullet friction on the rifling pulls the barrel pitch with it as it goes up bore. Newtons third law does not apply as some folks think.
The lap slug needs to hold the land corners of the rifling sharp and a mop will not do this. When I hand lap I cast a new slug every 250 round trips up and back and recharge the existing lap every 50 round trips. This will maintain a sharp land top corner profile and lap the bottom of the groove as well as the top and sides. Round groove bottom rifling does not mean the land top corners are round nor should they be for top accuracy.Another option re: lapping is using compound on an unmentionable rifle or shotgun mop. It would conform to the barrel interior dimensions pretty well.
wm
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