my own hand built .45 cal. flintlock rifle with a Douglas "1 in 48 twist," 39 inch long barrel. My "target load" where it shot the smallest group size for shooting paper or other targets at 25 and 50 yards was 42 1/2 grains of Dupont FFFg.
Unburnt powder or unburnable powder ? .
Greener, amongst others, tried cutting a barrel back until deflagration left unburned powder. He got to 2 inches beyond the charge IIRC before finding unburned powder. What he did find was that the velocity decreased. Despite the powder all burning early velocity does increase (up to a point) as barrel length increases nevertheless. We pay too little attention to the adiabatic expansion of the gases. A considerable part of the expansion comes not from the production of gases but from their expansion as it heats. This is one reason why Aubonne Swiss sporting powder uses slightly more saltpetre than is the normal optimum. Not to make more gas but to heat the gas further.
I see accuracy and barrel length has drifted into the thread. Leaving aside sight radius. For which older eyes need less as they work better with the rear sight further away from the eyes even if it shortens the sight radius. Your barrel bends like a spring when you fire. How much varies with the type but changing the charge produces a different harmony to the spring so the barrel points slightly differently as the bullet/ball leaves the muzzle. Doubters need only look up slow motion shots of an unmentionable AK on youtube to see the barrel visibly flex wildly. Thus different loads have different points of impact from this cause as well as from the change in velocity. They can work such that a greater charge with a higher velocity will result in a lower POI instead of a higher one as it catches the barrel flex at a different, lower point in the cycle. The muzzle of a thin modern unmentionable barrel can cycle through (exceptionally) a whole half inch of movement. A military musket probably moves least of all bar heavy target rifle barrels.
They were testing 12 ga incendiary rounds. That fire was not ignited nor sustained by smokeless powder ejecta.Well, we know it can happen with smokeless :
This was posted on another forum. The fire ignites on the far left lane but if you notice, it spreads to powder on each of the other lanes as well. Unknown what they were shooting and if any defective shells were involved.
http://www.worldstarhiphop.com/videos/video.php?v=wshh8Rl4Tm75dOlsChIq
There is a correlation to a point. There are velocity nodes where accuracy peaks. After optimal accuracy is reached, increased velocity will open the groups.
But, ha ha, there is also the weight of the powder (both burning, unburnt and ash) that is moving along with the ball. I guarantee if you set the rifle on a smooth flat surface (ideally a frictionless one) and touch it off with a fuse it will move more than 0.2" in a direction opposite the ball's travel. ;-)
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