Every person interested in double rifles soon learns the concept of "regulation". Regulation usually means a specific load and projectile that shoots parallel. Increase the projectile weight or powder load and the barrels will shoot wide of point of aim, decrease and they will shoot more together even to the point of crossing (right barrel shooting left, left barrel shooting right). This is true for modern cartridge as well as muzzleloading double rifles.
The following image describes the concept better than any words.
The accepted explanation for this fenomenon is that recoil doesn't act in line with the centre of the stock, but acting to the right or to the left of centerline moves the gun accordingly as shown on the picture above.
The earliest record I found that mentions that "recoil" principle is a 19th century book by a very well known English gunsmith "The gun and its development" by Greener. It is also repeated in many modern books on the subject as well as online resources.
However, there is another 19th century book by James Forsyth titled "The sporting rifle and its projectiles". In that book he mentions how doubles have to be constructed, but on the reason why he sends the reader to the "Field" magazine. No doubt he didn't want to be ridiculed by questioning the "accepted science" in his book, but at the se time he read the article so he knew the real principle why the double shoots wide unless regulated near.
I'll also add the author of the article (and the experiment) is Horatio Philips. He is a person responsible for conducting many of 19th century "Field" trials experiments and he is responsible for collating the data into tables etc. He is a person that I trust is telling us truth in what he has discovered.
So with no more delay I attach the article below. It starts a third way down the page in left column. It continues in the right column and finishes on next page in left column. I'm sorry for the text quality, but it is a reprint of a 130 year old article after all.
For those that didn't fully understand the text (due to bad quality / language etc) I summarise below.
They attached a set of parallel barrels (with ribs soldered in usual way) in way that prevents them moving to a large block of wood. They backed the block of wood to prevent recoil. They shot this contraption and it was determined it shoots 20 inches wide at 100m. No recoil movement possible, and yet it does shoot wide.
Then they took a "cross eye stock". It is for people that are right hand and left eye dominant and looks like this:
They installed a set of double barrels in it expecting both will shoot to the left if it is indeed recoil not acting in line that moves the poi. Both barrels shot normally.
Finally they explain an experiment with hydrostatic pressure with witch they simulated pressure of powder combustion and noticed the barrel steel expanding slightly in diameter, at the same time the length of the barrel "being shot" got slightly shorter bending the whole assembly to the side! And this is truly why double rifles shoot as they shoot.
The following image describes the concept better than any words.
The accepted explanation for this fenomenon is that recoil doesn't act in line with the centre of the stock, but acting to the right or to the left of centerline moves the gun accordingly as shown on the picture above.
The earliest record I found that mentions that "recoil" principle is a 19th century book by a very well known English gunsmith "The gun and its development" by Greener. It is also repeated in many modern books on the subject as well as online resources.
However, there is another 19th century book by James Forsyth titled "The sporting rifle and its projectiles". In that book he mentions how doubles have to be constructed, but on the reason why he sends the reader to the "Field" magazine. No doubt he didn't want to be ridiculed by questioning the "accepted science" in his book, but at the se time he read the article so he knew the real principle why the double shoots wide unless regulated near.
I'll also add the author of the article (and the experiment) is Horatio Philips. He is a person responsible for conducting many of 19th century "Field" trials experiments and he is responsible for collating the data into tables etc. He is a person that I trust is telling us truth in what he has discovered.
So with no more delay I attach the article below. It starts a third way down the page in left column. It continues in the right column and finishes on next page in left column. I'm sorry for the text quality, but it is a reprint of a 130 year old article after all.
For those that didn't fully understand the text (due to bad quality / language etc) I summarise below.
They attached a set of parallel barrels (with ribs soldered in usual way) in way that prevents them moving to a large block of wood. They backed the block of wood to prevent recoil. They shot this contraption and it was determined it shoots 20 inches wide at 100m. No recoil movement possible, and yet it does shoot wide.
Then they took a "cross eye stock". It is for people that are right hand and left eye dominant and looks like this:
They installed a set of double barrels in it expecting both will shoot to the left if it is indeed recoil not acting in line that moves the poi. Both barrels shot normally.
Finally they explain an experiment with hydrostatic pressure with witch they simulated pressure of powder combustion and noticed the barrel steel expanding slightly in diameter, at the same time the length of the barrel "being shot" got slightly shorter bending the whole assembly to the side! And this is truly why double rifles shoot as they shoot.