Was reading an article about accuracy in a modern rifle and the ammo manufacturer was stating there ammo for accuracy had a slower velocity to improve accuracy. That being said I wondered had anyone tested this concept in black powder rifles. I would assume it would follow suit. Even though I have always tried to achieve the max velocity. Maybe that is why I am a ousy shot.
There is sound truth in it. As a military match shooter who trains offhand with .36 caliber Pennsylvania long rifle flintlock, there are some important considerations to take into account.
Caldwell Tack Driver Filled Bag Shooting Rest
Is a rest that only secures the rifle within the area of the action and lock area being supported. Without and tension being applied. This is good for testing loads and preparing to file your front sight to the correct elevation. NEVER support a long rifle on the barrel. Perhaps any rifle.
The long rifle was designed, rather brilliantly, to be fired accurately offhand. Thus the early invention of the swamped barrel for heavier calibers.
The stock on most any rifle is the most influential variable to the rifles accuracy as it can and will affect the harmonics. Thus we now have the modern chassis and free floating barrels.
This affects even the first shot. Contrary to popular belief.
The long rifle always shoots more accurately without supporting the barrel. For testing loads and filing your front sight, rest only back at the transition or closer to the lock. The balance point of the long rifle is its best attribute and is the true reason why it’s accurate. The rifle will shoot better than you with the right load.
Shooting it offhand is how you get good at hunting with it. Good at shooting regardless.
With even practicing twice a week you can be an expert. There is a problem with men and shooting that prevents them from becoming experts at shooting. Once they get a load and instead of concentrating on form and shooting, they start “chasing the worm”. It’s as if finding the perfect load is their most entertaining and fun challenge. Round and round they go. Instead of looking at it like an instrument of skill and hunting tool, they start viewing it as a potential “sniper” rifle. A modern day phenomenon that men have to pursue some optimum ballistic utopia. First off, you aren’t a good enough shot as you haven’t trained yourself at offhand shoot twice a week. Everything is off a bench as you continue to “chase the worm”.
My second point. If you can’t push down ten consecutive shots down your barrel, your barrel is either still rough on the inside or you tried to make a sniper rifle out of your instrument of efficiency. Your rifle.
Overly thick patches and some mythical, magical lube. Even olive oil will work or any kind of fat. I use moose milk and soak my patches or strips in it. If you have to drive your ball down the barrel, you might have gone further than you needed to get a good load. Stop supporting the barrel at the bench.
That’s my 2 cents. I’m sure there will be some that disagree with me.
If your group fits in the size of a fist from 50 to 100 yards offhand, you can kill anything. Are you shooting at horse flies?