When I first got into BP shooting I was taught by the old boys that you always used 3F in .50 caliber or smaller and 2F in everything bigger. Unlike a lot of things in the hobby, most people seemed to accept that as being the way it had to be done, and you didn’t question that wisdom. Forty years later that is still being taught to newbies, and we’ve all seen it stated a thousand times. In a current thread, Alden said, “.50 is the line in the sand...” Like any good beginner I assumed the old boys knew what they were talking about and that there were good reasons behind that rule. As I got more experience, began to figure out how out guns work a little more, doubt reared its ugly head. I could find no reasonable explanation for it, so I followed my hunch and tried using 3F in larger calibers, and wasn’t much surprised to find that it worked just fine, sometimes better than the required 2F.
So, in my personal experience, in my guns, the rule has turned out to be a lot of nonsense without any basis in reality. I ignore it, because I’ve decided it is another one of those “facts” which has been perpetuated down through the years for no good reason, handed along by a lot of people who just accept it without question and pass it along.
But, maybe I’m talking through my hat, maybe there is good reason behind it which I don’t understand. If so, I’d sure like to be straightened out. So, my question”¦ does anyone know where that rule came from? When it got started? Why it got started? Who started it? What the reason behind it is?
Spence