Do the Thompson Center "Round Ball Twist" barrels have the same shallow depth of the grooves as their standard barrels? Thanks in advance.
I've never owned one but I have handled two with close inspection, (they're rare in these parts), and both of those showed a distinct difference from the common barrels.Do the Thompson Center "Round Ball Twist" barrels have the same shallow depth of the grooves as their standard barrels? Thanks in advance.
I do not have a definitive answer for you. However, I can add this.Do the Thompson Center "Round Ball Twist" barrels have the same shallow depth of the grooves as their standard barrels? Thanks in advance.
I think that a member here said the larger the caliber the better a 1/48 twist TC would shoot RB.
That sound like a great set up. Excessively deep grooves are detrimental to fine accuracy.According to the T/C catalogs that I have the round ball twist barrels have .010" deep cut rifling.
Ya know, with one of my .50 TC's, I tried thicker patches, thinner patches, .490 round ball, .495 round ball, different powder charges, different powders, swabbing between shots, not swabbing between shots, and none of that helped. Not saying that there isn't/wasn't a magic load for them, but I didn't find it. It was much easier to give in and shoot conicals, which they liked very much. Very accurate with Maxi Balls and Great Plains conicals.That sound like a great set up. Excessively deep grooves are detrimental to fine accuracy.
And, btw, the 1:48 TC barrels are capable of great patched ball accuracy. Just do not expect to feed it loose loads and skip cleaning between shots.
LOL, great round ball accuracy? Accuracy is so many different things to so many people. MY TC Hawken off a bench at 50 yfs could make ragged one hole 5 shot groups. (with different sights than the crappy stock sights) So could my 50 caliber smooth bore. At 75 yds, the TC group would open up to 1.5 inches. The smooth bore could still do better at about 1.25 inch 5 shot groups. At 100 yds, the TC was at best a 4 inch 5 shot group. The smooth bore opened up to just a fraction over the TC group. My H&H target barrel on the TC stock with the same lock off the bench in similar calm weather could shoot 1 inch 5 shot 45 caliber groups with open sights at 100yds.. My heavy barrel Hopkins and Allen underhammer with stock 45 caliber barrel and open sights could do 2 inch groups off the bench at 100yds. With diopter rear and globe front sights, the group shrank below 1 inch. My 19th century heavy bench rifle with open sights and 3 inch ACF barrel could shot ragged one hole 5 shot 62 caliber holes. that could be covered with a 50 cent piece. None of my guns could shoot as well as the cross patch slug guns they shoot up at Blue Mountain Muzzle loaders outside of Shartlesville, PA Those 100yd matches are determined by the number of x's not the number of tens. Nearly every one of those guns can shoot caliber size 5 shot groups at 100 yds. Matches are lost by what fraction of an inch a shooter throws a shot or two out.That sound like a great set up. Excessively deep grooves are detrimental to fine accuracy.
And, btw, the 1:48 TC barrels are capable of great patched ball accuracy. Just do not expect to feed it loose loads and skip cleaning between shots.
Its not necessarily the rate of twists 1:48 that can be the issue. Its the dimensions and depth the rifling is that makes the difference as well. Either way, there is no denying a slower twist is superior for RB and a faster twist is optimal for longer, conical projectiles. Generally speaking, a 1:48 twist does shoot conical well when inside there proper powder charge range. And I can tell you for a fact that some of the very same 1:48 twist ML can be problematic trying to get them to shoot RB accurately.Fifty years ago nobody bitched about TC barrels we just shot the heck out of them and won matches with them. Everyone shot round balls. We didn't know we had to clean after every shot. We shot all day and cleaned once when we got home. The 1:48 twist was never questioned. Apparently Jake and Sam's customers felt the same as all original Hawkens of all calibers were rifled 1:48.
I have one of their rifles with their 1 turn in 66 inches barrel that is longer that is marked for round ballDo the Thompson Center "Round Ball Twist" barrels have the same shallow depth of the grooves as their standard barrels? Thanks in advance.
Enter your email address to join: