Have an antique rifle with a bore size between 54 and 58 calibers and a coned muzzle.
Have been shooting a 54 caliber ball double patched with 0.020" linen. The load is accurate.
With 0.040" of patching on both sides of the ball, how would you calculate the approximate size of a proper fitted ball?
@Rokon , you mentioned shooting a "54 caliber ball." Is that ball actually .540", or did you mean one of the balls marketed for .54 caliber
rifles? You can get round balls in .520", .526", .527", .530", .535", and .540" from the various dealers online. If you are shooting an actual .540" ball with a .020" patch, you could try a .550" or .562" ball and a thinner patch. Track of the Wolf sells both.
I agree with the other fellows, though, in that it would be good to know the actual bore size, land to land. "Between 54 and 58 calibers " is a pretty big range. Among the myriad swaged and pre-cast balls on the market, you can find all of the sizes listed above, as well as .562", .570", .575", and .580".
The bottom line, though, is how well it shoots, and how much fun you are having with it. Some people will stop at nothing in the quest for pinpoint accuracy. Don Coble, a noted benchrest shooter in the fifties and early sixties, used a ball of bore size or even .001"
over bore size? Walter Cline, author of
The Muzzle-Loading Rifle, Then and Now, wrote that he achieved best accuracy with whatever sized ball could be just pushed down the bore by the weight of the ramrod alone, when the ball was bare or un-patched. That would probably mean right at bore diameter. For me, ease of loading is an important factor, and I'm willing to sacrifice some accuracy for easier loading. I tend to like a ball .015" or even up to. 020" under bore size, with a patch just thick enough to fill the grooves. There is at least one active thread on this forum discussing the use of .480" balls in .50 caliber rifles, and it turns out there are a number of us shooting balls well under bore size. Not that I'm recommending you do the same. As a matter of fact, if your current ball and patch combination is accurate and easy to load, there is no compelling reason to change.
It would be great if you could share your actual ball and bore sizes, though.
Best regards,
Notchy Bob