I have a Parker Hale P53 in excellent condition. I cast up bullets from a Lyman mould 577213PH. The bullets mic at .577 and they are a slip-fit in the muzzle requiring firm thumb pressure to start, but load smoothly down the bore. I weighed all the bullets to 542-543 grains and used soft lead.
I put up a target at 50 & 100 metres and loaded with 60 grains ffg. Using the 6 o’clock hold (because it’s a repeatable consistency hold) I began at 50 meters. I couldn’t hit the paper at all. After 5 rounds I tried 65 grains but no results. I couldn’t tell if I was high or low. Then I switched over to 60 grains of fffg powder and I began to hit the target more or less consistently. I tried 65 grains of fffg and things stayed about the same.
I know these are not target rifles, they are battle rifles. However I think a 4-5 inch group at 100 meters should be obtainable. My frustration is with the fact that almost every bullet keyholed the target.
This is my first experience with rifle muskets.
I put up a target at 50 & 100 metres and loaded with 60 grains ffg. Using the 6 o’clock hold (because it’s a repeatable consistency hold) I began at 50 meters. I couldn’t hit the paper at all. After 5 rounds I tried 65 grains but no results. I couldn’t tell if I was high or low. Then I switched over to 60 grains of fffg powder and I began to hit the target more or less consistently. I tried 65 grains of fffg and things stayed about the same.
I know these are not target rifles, they are battle rifles. However I think a 4-5 inch group at 100 meters should be obtainable. My frustration is with the fact that almost every bullet keyholed the target.
This is my first experience with rifle muskets.