What was the barrel quality of the older Lyman Plains Rifle from Lyman that came from Italy? Were they accurate, did they clean up well, or were they patch rippers? The quality of the workmanship appears to be there.
I figured that. Thanks for the reply!Almost all new barrels are patch rippers. The corners of the lands can be quite sharp. It only takes about 200 to 300 shots to sort that out. If you are looking at an older used Lyman, the lands should be pretty smooth.
I figured if it feels grippy running a patch down it I'll run JB Bore Paste down it with Kroil, or maybe 3M Scotch Brite pads? Not even sure if that would work or not?I built three GPR kits in the late 80s and the bores were not very good compared to Green Mountain barrels. One was very nasty and was returned for replacement. The one they sent back was just OK and all of them I lead lapped before building the kits.
I have owned a few, and most could be made to shoot accurately with some elbow grease. ‘Rough’ bores and crowns are easily corrected. The one irritating problem was the off center bore (which current manufacturing process appears to have corrected) when it occurred in the left to right orientation of the factory barrels. It seemed like they could shoot around corners, but when shooting around a corner wasn’t required, you almost couldn’t adjust the sights enough for windage while keeping the sights in the barrel dovetails. Don’t believe it was that common, but owned two and saw maybe half a dozen total.What was the barrel quality of the older Lyman Plains Rifle from Lyman that came from Italy? Were they accurate, did they clean up well, or were they patch rippers? The quality of the workmanship appears to be there.
I short 3f in my 3 50’s. They are more accurate with this granulation. Now, that is with patched round ball. 80gr of 3f with connicals gives me pressure spikes, so 2F is more suitable and can be driven with a heavier charge / faster velocities.I usually see a barrel speed up in the first 100 rounds or so in a CFR before I get too serious about load development. A barrel is a barrel, so I'd only assume the same in a black powder gun as well.
I thought I'd try Swiss 1,5Fg in the .54. since I can get some. The Granulations fall within 2Fg, just not the smaller fines. I read most of you guys like to use FFFg, and what I used in the '80's and '90's. So why now do the powder makers say 3Fg for .45 and smaller and 2Fg for .50 and larger when I used to use 3Fg in my .50 cal.?
Thanks in advance.
This is a guideline ONLY. You can use 3f in larger rifles and handguns. I shoot 3f in my 69cal smoothbore. That said, you must cut the charge levels about 10%. The benefit is using less powder and often less fouling with the same level of accuracy or better.Type Granulation Use
1Fg 1.2-1.6 mm Cannons, shotguns and muskets
1.5Fg .85-1.2 mm 45 Caliber rifles and bigger
2Fg .65-1,2 mm 45 Caliber rifles and bigger
3Fg .50-.8mm 45 caliber rifles and smaller, pistols
4Fg .19-.23 mm Flintlock priming powder only
Powder granulation is one of these areas where we are trying to make all powders of a specific granulation equal in releasing energy. Different brands can have different performance based on the quality of the potassium nitrate and the quality of the carbon extracted from a specific species of wood. For what it is worth, the switch from 3f to 2f has been around since Lyman published their first black powder manual.I usually see a barrel speed up in the first 100 rounds or so in a CFR before I get too serious about load development. A barrel is a barrel, so I'd only assume the same in a black powder gun as well.
I thought I'd try Swiss 1,5Fg in the .54. since I can get some. The Granulations fall within 2Fg, just not the smaller fines. I read most of you guys like to use FFFg, and what I used in the '80's and '90's. So why now do the powder makers say 3Fg for .45 and smaller and 2Fg for .50 and larger when I used to use 3Fg in my .50 cal.?
Thanks in advance.
Thanks, I saw that....Powder granulation is one of these areas where we are trying to make all powders of a specific granulation equal in releasing energy. Different brands can have different performance based on the quality of the potassium nitrate and the quality of the carbon extracted from a specific species of wood. For what it is worth, the switch from 3f to 2f has been around since Lyman published their first black powder manual.
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