Is it fair to say that most traditional muzzleloaders are not meant to use powder charges of more than about 80-90 grains or so? I have routinely used 100 gr of 2F in my Hawken type rifles and getting decent accuracy for hunting, even a few X's once in a while and My T/C Renegade took 120 gr loads routinely with heavy bullets for hunting and did well with that too. I realize each gun has its own best load but just wondered about the makeup of the guns themselves. Powder conservation being considered, how common are larger charges? I don't see them mentioned much if any.
So a lot of the folks use patched round ball. They get good performance and very good accuracy. Some folks like to use conicals, but truth be told, they were invented for a fast combat reload vs. humans, not for hunting. One famous dangerous game hunter in Asia, who hunted tigers and rhinos and elephants in India, did not like the conical bullets of his day. (See
The Sporting Rifle and Its Projectiles by Forsyth 1867) Conicals will, in some cases allow the use of a poorly cared for rifle bore, when a patched round ball simply will not work.
So 2Fg with a flat based conical bullet may be working well for you because that's a) equal to a 90 grain load IF you switched to 3Fg, and b) that heavy load may be helping your bullet to obturate (grab the rifling). OR you might be losing a bit of the gas before the bullet fully obturates and seals against the inside walls of your barrel. I wonder at what design of bullet you are using?
As to loads Yes there is data. Here is the GOEX chart. The only flaw is that they don't tell you the length of the barrel that they used, and the weight of the projectiles are wrong...too heavy.
GOEX Round Ball.......
GOEX Conical....
Here are some charts for the Round Ball. The round ball has a crap-tastic ballistic coefficient, so it sheds velocity faster than a conical bullet, especially when that bullet is smaller caliber. So a .45 caliber 200 grain conical bullet launched at the same speed as a 175 grain .490 round ball will be faster at 100 yards, even though it's 25 grains heavier.
ROUND BALL:
I normally use 70 grains of 3Fg with my .530 round ball.. My state requires a minimum of 60 grains for deer hunting, regardless of the projectile size. So, in case I ran into a DNR officer who wanted to check my load..., I wanted 10 grains more than the minimum. When
I tested this it shot extremely well from the bench out to 100 yards.
My load is under supersonic at 100 yards, but I can say that with a broadside hit, the ball will go through a doe or a buck at that speed.
I used to joke with the folks at the range who were shooting 120 grains of powder (because their adjustable measure would not go higher) and a .50 cal, 320 grain REAL bullet, IF they thought a 405 grain bullet doing a mere 1330 fps was not good enough for deer, since it was what was in the .45-70 cartridge used by some buffalo hunters in the past.. Then I'd ask them why they thought their bullet, being only 85 grains lighter, needed a 120 grain charge. Most of them thought that black powder was simply anemic, and some just liked the boom and the recoil.
So the shooter needs to do what works. IF your combination gives you good accuracy, and you're not worried or bothered by the recoil. That's fine. Don't fix things if they are not broken. If you'd like to try a patched round ball, I encourage you to give it a chance.
LD