This has been an interesting thread, to say the least. Many opinions here.
I’m not sure what the quality of Black Powder was back then. Did they dilute it at Rendezvous like they did the liquor?
I do mostly target shooting. I’ve always liked the old adage of starting with the caliber and working up. From what I’ve seen, 32 is somewhere around 30 to 35 grains. My 40 likes 40 grains of 3F. My short-barreled 50s (28” & 32”) are fond of 60 grains. I went with 2F as the impact point was the same as 3F, but with less kick. My wife shoots 60 grains of 3F in her 39” Barreled Pedersoli long rifle. Years ago, I had an Allen Arms 53 caliber Santa Fe Hawken with a 1” x 32” barrel. I shot the same in that as I did my 54 T/C Hawken with Green Mountain barrel; 70 grains of 3F. Because there’s no rifling, I can get away with 60 grains of 2F in my 62 cal Trade Gun.
What little bit of deer hunting I’ve done was with a 28” barreled gun with a 1 in 32” twist, a 385 grain Great Plains Bullet, and 90 grains of 2F. Most of the research I did and opinions I received, said that’s what to use. I even thought about 90 for deer and 110 for elk, replicating the loads from the old Sharps.
The last little buck was about 35 yards away. I’m pretty sure it was a clear case of overkill! If I get a Muzzleloader tag this year, I plan on using a Flintlock with PBR. Rick Hacker in his Book, “The Muzzleloading Hunter”, states that he uses cap-locks with conicals because he wants reliability plus quick, clean kills and doesn’t like having to chase the critter down. Others here and on Facebook like hunting the way our Forefathers did. A guy I shoot with occasionally down south says his choice for hunting with PBR is 60 grains for deer and 80 for Elk using a 50 cal rifle.
I did an experiment a while back. Someone in the club said that because we usually shoot at targets 25 yards, we should load down. I fired three shots of 30, 40, 50, and 60 grains of 2F BP. They all hit the target but 60 grouped better.
I’m not sure what “new” Hawken book the OP is in reference to but I just received “The Hawken Rifle”, by Bob Woodfill from the NMLRA; Copywrite 2020.
I’ve often been told a rifle likes what it likes. A buddy of mine shoots 40 grains of 2F in his Ohio long rifle. He ran out of powder at a Match and borrowed some 2F. His shots were all in the same hole!
I’ve often wondered if one should shoot 3F in a short-barreled rifle and 2F in a long regardless of caliber. That way you could take advantage of the burn rates for each.
Thanks!
Walt