I have been working on getting a load dialed in for my 50 and 54 caliber Lyman Deerstalkers. The goal is three shot groups under an inch center to center with open sights. This week I got the 54 to do it. The 50 won't budge past 1.5 inch C/C so I will keep working on that one. The rifles are stock except for addition of Lyman 57 rear sights. An inch C/C at 100 yards is nothing with a fast twist inline, but I'm pretty happy with a stock 1/48" twist 24" barrel. The 54 is the stainless version with the shallower lands that come with it, and the 50 is the blued version with the regular height lands.
In case anyone wants the load direction, the bullets were hand cast, ladle poured Maxi Balls from original T&C molds (420 grain and 370 grain). I weigh the bullets and anything +/- .5 grain gets recast. The lead is a lead/tin alloy of 1:60. The powder is Pyrodex P at 80 and 90 grains by volume (the respective rifle maxes). I use Ox-Yoke wads lubed with 50% bee wax, 40% Crisco, 10% Canola oil. I pan lube the bullets with the same and only lube the back lube grove. Velocity is 1310-1340 fps with standard deviations in the high teens. I compress the wad and powder charge to 35 lbs of pressure on the rod. I use an old Bonanza Benchrest die with a replacement spring calibrated for 35 lbs to push down on the rod. The caps are RWS 1075+ (#11). They cost more but they work every time. Finally I patch wipe after each shot.
I am thinking of weighing volume charges (yes, they will be lighter than a black powder charges and seeing the median weight and sticking +/- 0.5 grains from that. I'll check the chronograph and see if that makes a difference on SD. I have weighed some volume charges and once in a while I got a charge that was 4 or 5 grains over. When I can get some Swiss BP I'll try it the whole experiment again.
This post is half humble brag and half "maybe this load detail will be useful to someone". Frankly I am kind of amazed that a $450 generic muzzleloader with a compromise twist and hooked breach can shoot like that. I'll try for 200 yards next and see what that does. That is past my ethical elk hunting energy range with these rifle/bullet combinations but it will be interesting to see.
In case anyone wants the load direction, the bullets were hand cast, ladle poured Maxi Balls from original T&C molds (420 grain and 370 grain). I weigh the bullets and anything +/- .5 grain gets recast. The lead is a lead/tin alloy of 1:60. The powder is Pyrodex P at 80 and 90 grains by volume (the respective rifle maxes). I use Ox-Yoke wads lubed with 50% bee wax, 40% Crisco, 10% Canola oil. I pan lube the bullets with the same and only lube the back lube grove. Velocity is 1310-1340 fps with standard deviations in the high teens. I compress the wad and powder charge to 35 lbs of pressure on the rod. I use an old Bonanza Benchrest die with a replacement spring calibrated for 35 lbs to push down on the rod. The caps are RWS 1075+ (#11). They cost more but they work every time. Finally I patch wipe after each shot.
I am thinking of weighing volume charges (yes, they will be lighter than a black powder charges and seeing the median weight and sticking +/- 0.5 grains from that. I'll check the chronograph and see if that makes a difference on SD. I have weighed some volume charges and once in a while I got a charge that was 4 or 5 grains over. When I can get some Swiss BP I'll try it the whole experiment again.
This post is half humble brag and half "maybe this load detail will be useful to someone". Frankly I am kind of amazed that a $450 generic muzzleloader with a compromise twist and hooked breach can shoot like that. I'll try for 200 yards next and see what that does. That is past my ethical elk hunting energy range with these rifle/bullet combinations but it will be interesting to see.