Hi,
I recently re-read James Forsyth "The sporting rifle and its projectiles" as I read it for z very first time some years before and I became interested why is it that muzzloading rifles (specially those shooting patched round balls) are most accurate with one specific powder amount. It is obvious why rifle's accuracy deteriorates when loaded with too much powder. Forsyth talks about it at length. The patch(or the lead) tears in the rifling and skips it resulting in unpredictable rotation.
However, it is not that obvious what happens if we load less than ideal amount of powder. It is definitely a fact prb muzzleloaders will shoot large groups with smaller loads. Then group size significantly tightens when we arrive at the ideal amount.
I observed it in 3 of my rifles. A. 38 cal "squirrel gun", a. 54 cal Pedersoli Pennsylvania flintlock and. 58 double barrel Kodiak. All 3 shot 6-8 inch groups starting with small loads and tightening groups significantly when I arrived at the right load.
I can imagine barrel resonance can have some effect, but not to the extent of 6-7 inch group at 50m tightening to holes touching on the target.
So my question is what is the theoretical explanation behind this? Is there any scientific research that attempts to explain it? Maybe there are other books someone can recommend?
I recently re-read James Forsyth "The sporting rifle and its projectiles" as I read it for z very first time some years before and I became interested why is it that muzzloading rifles (specially those shooting patched round balls) are most accurate with one specific powder amount. It is obvious why rifle's accuracy deteriorates when loaded with too much powder. Forsyth talks about it at length. The patch(or the lead) tears in the rifling and skips it resulting in unpredictable rotation.
However, it is not that obvious what happens if we load less than ideal amount of powder. It is definitely a fact prb muzzleloaders will shoot large groups with smaller loads. Then group size significantly tightens when we arrive at the ideal amount.
I observed it in 3 of my rifles. A. 38 cal "squirrel gun", a. 54 cal Pedersoli Pennsylvania flintlock and. 58 double barrel Kodiak. All 3 shot 6-8 inch groups starting with small loads and tightening groups significantly when I arrived at the right load.
I can imagine barrel resonance can have some effect, but not to the extent of 6-7 inch group at 50m tightening to holes touching on the target.
So my question is what is the theoretical explanation behind this? Is there any scientific research that attempts to explain it? Maybe there are other books someone can recommend?