ronaldrothb49
45 Cal.
- Joined
- Oct 31, 2021
- Messages
- 833
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I agree there were probably made a lot of smooth rifles, In thoughts on The Kentucky Rifle in The Golden Age Kindig list info from Leonard Reedy's journals. He list a number of guns made at $7.00 or less. At least one is listed as a smooth rifle so it is probably safe to say that many of the cheaper guns he made were probably smooth bore. Of all the repairs listed he freshed a barrel 128 times, way more than any other repair he made. Only 1 repair is listed as boring a barrel smooth.Wow! That's a lot of shooting! I don't know how many balls per shoot you did (50-100?) but it still sounds like a lot of shooting. Would be interesting to know what the bore / groove measurements were before and after.
I doubt that even during war time anyone put that many balls thru a gun. I will concede that these guns were used for YEARS, so yes, there was some wear on them. I also understand the effects of friction / pressure over time on anything. However, most "smoot Rifles" were made that way and not "shot out" or recut. TDY
I don't know what the measurements on that 40 cal were but when I retired it I was using a .400 ball and a .020 patch and that loaded very easy. There was still some VERY shallow rifling showing but the groups were starting to open up. No idea how many rounds I fired through it. I was a very active match shooter up until I injured my back in 2004.