I find I got better follow thru with the 42" barrel, once I startle swing it's hard to stop. just the way it works for me.
'Yet another 'take' on the long barrel's potential benefit. A fellow I built a Hudson Valley Fowler for claimed his shot pattern tightened when he used 1F powder. The thought here was that the slower 'push' type burn of the courser powder as opposed to the 'punch' ignition of finer grades was more conducive to holding the shot column together as it exited the muzzle. I've never tried it but it could conceivably make some sense.
I find I got better follow thru with the 42" barrel, once I startle swing it's hard to stop. just the way it works for me.
It does make sense both in the coarser granulation not giving too hard of an initial blow to the shot column and also possibly it helped depending on what kind of wadding that was used. The wadding did and does help absorb some of the initial push of the shot column. The poorer the wadding, the more noticeable this would be.
Gus
I have a 10 bore fowler with a 48" barrel and have no problems with it in brush. The longer barrel seems to produce tighter patterns and a bit higher velocity. I seriously doubt that fashion had anything to do with using long barrels@TreeMan's good thread on short-barreled smoothbores got me thinking about barrel lengths in general and long barrels in particular.
I understand short barrels and how performance relates but my main question is this: Why on earth do so many of pre-1860 firearms have barrels in excess of 40 inches? I would think all that barrel length would have a negative impact on portability....especially dense woods such as I'm familiar with in the PacNorWest. Is it balance? Powder charge? Fashion? I dunno. Really.
I bought a 12 gauge fowler from a member but my word, the length (42"). Most early fowlers though have that +40" barrel and I'd like to understand why besides balance. All of my unmentionable modern "fowlers" are all 30 inches and less. Help me wrap my noggin around this.
wm
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The powders we have today are fantastic. There seems to be this idea that blackpowder needs more barrel length to burn, than smokeless. It simply is not true. Blackpowder, like smokeless, is either burning right away, or it isn't. The pressure curve of Goex FFg is pretty much a match for a lot of modern smokeless powders like Bluedot, although it peaks at a much lower pressure. When it comes to shotguns, I've tested from 18 1/2" to 32", and there just is not a monumental difference. It's almost identical to the kind of differences you see with smokeless powders. It's the same thing with my 54 caliber rifles. The difference from my 10" pistol to 26" rifle is a fair, but not earth shattering difference 1050 fps to 1200 fps in this case. Then 32" was something like 1250 fps. So just like smokeless powders, the majority of the speed you are going to get from blackpowder is had in 18"-20" of barrel.
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Ah hah ! You're only the second guy I've heard of using the 1F ! The other fella reported the same improved result. I have Got To try this. Thanks for posting!When I cut my fowler barrel down to 36 inches I patterned it again. At 25 yards I found no discernable difference in the pattern. I still get the best patterns with 1F and it penetrates the tuna can at 25 yards. My normal load with this fowler was 70 grains of 3F, I increased it to 8o grains of 1F. since there are no pheasants around I don't worry abought follow through.
The longer barrel also provides a longer sight radius. And that is very useful.I don't think fashion is quite the right word. More like expectations or a persons perception of what looks right. In that context it's really just what you grew up with or are used to seeing. Germans made some of their guns shorter, Dutch longer and Americans kinda in the middle.
Just imagine if some of the big manufacturers Winchester, Ruger, Browning, etc...rereleased some of their old classics and drastically altered the barrel lengths.....it'd look weird and out of place to most of us but if you've never seen one or they had always been made that way....no big deal.
I also think maneuverability is worried about too much. I hunt a lot, live in the south so will hunt some pretty thick stuff. I've never thought...better take the shorter gun to hunt there cause' it's so thick. On the contrary my 44" barrel guns are good at laying the briars down so I can walk over em
It’s only about 10 FPS per inch. So a foot is only about 120 fps. If your initial velocity was 1600 vs 1500 fps at fifty yards your only abou 50 fps faster and at a hundred 20- 30 fps fasterIndeed, I should have mentioned earlier that they knew there was an advantage in gaining more velocity in longer barrels until the barrels reached around 7 or more feet, but no one was going to use that length for a hand toted rifle or smoothbore gun.
Gus
Ah. Hence the many at 42"?It’s only about 10 FPS per inch. So a foot is only about 120 fps. If your initial velocity was 1600 vs 1500 fps at fifty yards your only abou 50 fps faster and at a hundred 20- 30 fps faster
Beyond about three and a half feet you have to start increasing the powder charge to get an advantage as at lower charges there is a velocity loss in longer barrels
There is always the matter of which time in history we're discussing. I'll assume 18 hundreds.
If you judge today's powders by their consistency (specially brands like Swiss) then I could agree they are fantastic, but with regard to their strengths an argument can be made that there was "sporting powder" that was almost double the strength of our 3f available in 18-hundreds. This argument is based on loads and their velocities given in old books like Forsyth's, the Field trials etc. Although this is in the later half of the century. English authors had no problem obtaining good quality powder in India, but if I remember correctly even Forsyth mentions about importing powder from London. I'm not sure what the situation was in Americas at the time.
Regarding speed difference you mention a difference of 1050fps vs 1200fps. That is huge. It is 33% more energy (for a 67 grain buckshot ball for example) as energy increases with square of speed. The numbers perhaps don't seem drastically different, but I imagine for someone who carries all his supplies on his back being able to use 33% less powder to achieve same performance is worth carrying that rifle. Then you mentioned 26in barrel had 1200fps to 1250fps in 32in barrel.The energy difference with 1 ounce of shot is 9%. Is that a lot? If powder is expensive and you are getting other perceived benefits from a longer barrel (longer sight radius, more stability when aiming) and you like the look of it... This then results in fowlers with 44in barrels.
So my opinion is a combination of all those factors resulted in those long barrels.
Pattern wise I can't see a difference in pattern spread between my cylinder bore musket with 44in barrel and a cylinder bore in my side by side double with 29in barrel.
However, I can definitely see a difference in pattern spread between a 10in smoothbore barrel, and a 29 in one.
It’s only about 10 FPS per inch. So a foot is only about 120 fps. If your initial velocity was 1600 vs 1500 fps at fifty yards your only abou 50 fps faster and at a hundred 20- 30 fps faster
Beyond about three and a half feet you have to start increasing the powder charge to get an advantage as at lower charges there is a velocity loss in longer barrels
I too use 1f for shot loads in my Bess and Charly for the same reason, I get better shot patterns with 1f. I use a felt or veggie wad over the powder and make shot cups from brown bags. Works great for squirrels and bunnies.When I cut my fowler barrel down to 36 inches I patterned it again. At 25 yards I found no discernable difference in the pattern. I still get the best patterns with 1F and it penetrates the tuna can at 25 yards. My normal load with this fowler was 70 grains of 3F, I increased it to 8o grains of 1F. since there are no pheasants around I don't worry abought follow through.
Well Lyman’s black powder ballistic shooting a .54 on 90 grains 3 f have a 28” barrel at1531 fps. A 43”barrel at 1685 a gain of 155 fps. But a 34” 1591, 60 fps faster then the 28” … 60 fps for 6”Good post!
Ironoxide hit on something here we may have been
What length barrels are you talking about the difference above and what caliber or gauge?
Velocity loss does not occur until barrel lengths exceed what a human is willing to carry on foot.
Gus
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