- Joined
- Nov 30, 2021
- Messages
- 49
- Reaction score
- 46
Howdy folks. I am relatively new to the world of muzzleloading (or to rifles at least) and I'm looking to gain a better understanding of bullet drop when it comes to my rifle.
I took my Hatfield .45 out today for the third time. The first, I shot at 25 yards - she was printing maybe a tad low at that distance but was otherwise dead-on. The second time, I shot it at 50 yards. There was a pretty big drop at this point, probably averaging about 8 inches, but again the ball was falling reliably in the same spot every time, at least when user error didn't budge it a little bit. Today, I tried the 100 target. Note that I've used the same charge of 60 grains of 3F Goex for all of these shots, aside from the first few where I was working up my load and settled on this. At first, I was having a difficult time even telling where the bullets were hitting, but after a while I realized I was getting a drop of about 30 inches or so at the worst, maybe more like 18 at best. I ended up with I think three shots on paper, out of the nearly 20 I fired! I could account for 12 or 13 of them, some of them were absent altogether.
I mentioned this to my dad, who used to shoot his flinter in local competitions fairly successfully, and he wasn't overly surprised about the drop. But it makes me wonder, why? It seems to me that the same charge of powder I use in my 45-70 that pushes a much heavier bullet with practically no drop at that range should be keeping the comparatively tiny patched round ball in the air longer than that. Obviously the ballistics are drastically different, the twist of the rifling is different, the way the PRB engages the rifling is different, etc. Of course there are many reasons this could be the case, but I'd like to understand exactly why such a drop is to be expected (if it is to be expected), and if possible, how to bring it back up a little. I'm no stranger to Kentucky windage, but two and a half feet seems awfully hard to compensate for. Maybe the only answer is practice - in which case practice I shall. Figured it was worth picking the brains of some folks more knowledgeable than myself though.
I took my Hatfield .45 out today for the third time. The first, I shot at 25 yards - she was printing maybe a tad low at that distance but was otherwise dead-on. The second time, I shot it at 50 yards. There was a pretty big drop at this point, probably averaging about 8 inches, but again the ball was falling reliably in the same spot every time, at least when user error didn't budge it a little bit. Today, I tried the 100 target. Note that I've used the same charge of 60 grains of 3F Goex for all of these shots, aside from the first few where I was working up my load and settled on this. At first, I was having a difficult time even telling where the bullets were hitting, but after a while I realized I was getting a drop of about 30 inches or so at the worst, maybe more like 18 at best. I ended up with I think three shots on paper, out of the nearly 20 I fired! I could account for 12 or 13 of them, some of them were absent altogether.
I mentioned this to my dad, who used to shoot his flinter in local competitions fairly successfully, and he wasn't overly surprised about the drop. But it makes me wonder, why? It seems to me that the same charge of powder I use in my 45-70 that pushes a much heavier bullet with practically no drop at that range should be keeping the comparatively tiny patched round ball in the air longer than that. Obviously the ballistics are drastically different, the twist of the rifling is different, the way the PRB engages the rifling is different, etc. Of course there are many reasons this could be the case, but I'd like to understand exactly why such a drop is to be expected (if it is to be expected), and if possible, how to bring it back up a little. I'm no stranger to Kentucky windage, but two and a half feet seems awfully hard to compensate for. Maybe the only answer is practice - in which case practice I shall. Figured it was worth picking the brains of some folks more knowledgeable than myself though.