I don't remember the word blackpowder occourin' in either volume. :rotf:marty_01 said:Thanks about the tip on P. O. Ackley's "Handbook for Shooters and Reloaders". Is the book focused mostly on blackpowder ballistics?
I don't remember the word blackpowder occourin' in either volume. :rotf:marty_01 said:Thanks about the tip on P. O. Ackley's "Handbook for Shooters and Reloaders". Is the book focused mostly on blackpowder ballistics?
I have seen many modern references to rifle-muskets such as the Enfields shooting high. I wonder however if this is perhaps due to a misunderstanding of how they were intended to be aimed. Modern shooters generally seem to use a "full sight", ie. place the tip of the foresight in line with the shoulders of the rearsight. Contemporary British musketry instruction refers to the "fine sight" as being the normal method of aiming, ie. place the tip of the foresight at the bottom of the 'V' of the rearsight.KanawhaRanger said:From what I have read in accounts of battles, the soldiers were told to aim low, about the waist of the enemy. I found in shooting rifle-muskets that the reason for this was that all of the ones I shot tended to shoot a little high, reproduction and original.
A significant part of the courses at the Hythe School of Musketry in England included range estimation.KanawhaRanger said:The rifle-muskets of course had graduated sights and the soldiers learned to estimate ranges just as they do now. ......
Enfields that I've seen have been sighted to 800 yds and they can hit pretty accurately at that range.
David Minshall said:manufactued by Holtzapffel & Co. in London.
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