dandan noodles
32 Cal
- Joined
- Jan 21, 2020
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The service load for .58 and .577 muskets was 60 grains FFg or possibly Fg powder.
1 grain per caliber. Not 2 grains per caliber.
"1 grain per caliber minimum. and 2 grins per caliber maximum." was the "rule of thumb" back in the day.
Yes, a heavier charge may have been more accurate.
However, they were still using Napolianic Tacticts up to the end of the Civil War, and fired unaimed vollies at the enwmy troops.
They were not shooting at individuals, excluding officers. They did aim at the officers.
I don't know if the Revolutionary muskets (Brown Bess, etc) used 60 grains or 1 grain per caliber. (rounded to nearest caliber that ended with a "0" or a "5".)
Yeah, that's because powder manufacture techniques changed between the French Revolution and the American Civil War. Charcoal made in iron cylinders produced much more powerful powder than the traditional charcoal manufacture techniques the French used. Also, Minie rifles needed to be shot at lower velocities, since if the pressure was too high it could rip the rim off the base of the bullet.
Also Napoleonic tactics weren't just about unaimed volleys; most of the firefight was carried out by skirmishers, whose aimed fire was estimated to be twice as effective as firing by company. Getting the maximum accuracy out of a shot was crucial, so you have to use enough powder to get maximum velocities.