paulvallandigham
Passed On
- Joined
- Jan 9, 2006
- Messages
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I agree with Bill. Use a chronograph to check both velocities, and standard devieation of velocity( SDV ) of your loads as you work them up. Its not uncommon that there is a slight variation in the bores of the two barrels, so that you have to use a different powder charge in each barrel to get them to group together. Sometimes you even have to use a different sized ball or Patch thickness in the two different barrels to get them to fire. Trying to get a load for a double gun is working on finding a load for TWO guns ! it takes a lot of work, but there is very great satisfaction.
When you are dealing with a .72 caliber gun, the Round Ball will weight and ounce and an eight, and when you have that much weight starting almost as large in diameter as a quarter, you have a huge freight car heading for your target. The huge lead slug is going to penetrate deeply, if not pass completely through the animal. If you are hunting heavy boned animals, or thick skinned animals- bear, moose, wild boar- then use an alloy lead for your Round ball. It will reduce the weight of the ball some, but it will also be slower to mushroom when it hits solid bone or muscle, and you will get the pentration needed to get to the vital orgasn for a clean kill. You DON'T have to send such a projectile out the barrel at break neck speeds. The neck you will break with be your own! That huge round ball going 1200 fps will deliver plenty of power to the target to kill at well past 100 yds. Its the trajectory that will control how far you can shoot that ball accurate, and I am sorry to say, you just can't push such a large lead ball fast enough to flatten that trajectory very much. Learn to stalk in close on your game instead, and you will find much greater success as a hunter. Getting to within 100 yds of a large game animal is not as hard as you may think.
When you are dealing with a .72 caliber gun, the Round Ball will weight and ounce and an eight, and when you have that much weight starting almost as large in diameter as a quarter, you have a huge freight car heading for your target. The huge lead slug is going to penetrate deeply, if not pass completely through the animal. If you are hunting heavy boned animals, or thick skinned animals- bear, moose, wild boar- then use an alloy lead for your Round ball. It will reduce the weight of the ball some, but it will also be slower to mushroom when it hits solid bone or muscle, and you will get the pentration needed to get to the vital orgasn for a clean kill. You DON'T have to send such a projectile out the barrel at break neck speeds. The neck you will break with be your own! That huge round ball going 1200 fps will deliver plenty of power to the target to kill at well past 100 yds. Its the trajectory that will control how far you can shoot that ball accurate, and I am sorry to say, you just can't push such a large lead ball fast enough to flatten that trajectory very much. Learn to stalk in close on your game instead, and you will find much greater success as a hunter. Getting to within 100 yds of a large game animal is not as hard as you may think.