Fffg black powder is all I had to use, starting with a .45 caliber flintlock longrifle (5 years), then a .50 caliber flintlock longrifle (4 years), and finally a .62 caliber flintlock longrifle (1 year).
All three barrels had a 1:48" rate of twist. My optimum load for the .45 caliber & .50 caliber rifles was 70 grains of Goex fffg black powder. In the .62 caliber rifle the optimum load was 75 grains of fffg Goex black powder.
All three barrels, one Douglas (.45 cal.), and two Getz (.50 & .62 cal.) were capable, off of a bench rest, of 5-shot groups measuring the size of a silver dollar, at a measured 100 yards. Every once in a while, I could pull off a 5-shot offhand group at 100 yards that equaled the bench rest groups. Like once a year when the shooting gods were smiling down upon me.
In order to damage any of those barrels shooting fffg black powder, I would have needed a 200 grain plus powder charge, and the recoil would have been intolerable.
All three barrels had a 1:48" rate of twist. My optimum load for the .45 caliber & .50 caliber rifles was 70 grains of Goex fffg black powder. In the .62 caliber rifle the optimum load was 75 grains of fffg Goex black powder.
All three barrels, one Douglas (.45 cal.), and two Getz (.50 & .62 cal.) were capable, off of a bench rest, of 5-shot groups measuring the size of a silver dollar, at a measured 100 yards. Every once in a while, I could pull off a 5-shot offhand group at 100 yards that equaled the bench rest groups. Like once a year when the shooting gods were smiling down upon me.
In order to damage any of those barrels shooting fffg black powder, I would have needed a 200 grain plus powder charge, and the recoil would have been intolerable.