Most false muzzles are rifled along with the barrel at the same time, for a perfect fit. That means that you cut off a piece of the barrel BEFORE the grooves are cut, drill the short false muzzle for pins, and drill through the new muzzle so that pins will hold the false muzzle Exactly in place when the rifling is done.
After the rifling is cut, the false muzzle is CONED- a taper is cut into the front of the false muzzle, to make it easier to begin loading the bullet that will be seated in the barrel. If paper patching is used( almost always), cross grooves are milled into the face of the false muzzle, that are the exact width of the strips to be used. They serve as a guide for the strips, both placing them at right angles, and insuring that the strips butt their edges against each other as the bullet is pushed into the false muzzle, for a Perfect GAS SEAL. Also, typically, a round groove is cut in the face to hold a WASHER. The washer is placed on top of the two strips of onion skin, or other paper in those grooves. The washer holds the two strips down, while the bullet is pushed through the hole in the washer and slowly pushed on the two strips of paper so that they are drawn down into the tapered bore of the false muzzle. The paper strips are typically lubed with a fine oil, and that oil helps the strips slip down into the bore around the bullet. When the bullet exits the back, or bottom side of the false muzzle, its completely surrounded by the paper patches, butted exactly against each other's edges, so that no seam can be noticed without a very close look for them. The False muzzle also serves as a "sizing " die, particularly for the paper, smoothing down folds at the corners. This sizing helps the PP bullet move down the bore of the rifle easily, with the grooves in the false muzzle guiding the bullet into the grooves in the barrel.
If you don't cut the grooves in both the barrel and the false muzzle at the same time, the little bit that the grooves of the barrel don't line up with those in the false muzzle will tear the paper patching. You would be better off using a false muzzle with NO rifling in it, and a coned barrel muzzle, but that would defeat the purpose of using a false muzzle in the first place. :hmm: :shocked2: