Danbo said:It's not a matter of weight, it's one of balance. Having weight forward tends to load the moment arm of the gun forward and reduce the tremors/wobbles/wandering front sight. How much forward is a matter of personal determination. Don't think there's a formula for figuring that out.
Butt heavy rifles are poop for offhand shooting...IMO.
dcriner said:Traditional ML firearms tend to be heavy. I assume that the old barrel materials, not having the strength of modern alloys, had to be extra thick.
But what about the barrel length (which also contributes to weight)? By modern standards, ML rifles and pistols have long barrels. Why?
I've wondered if in shooting round balls, for example, maybe the extra length was necessary to stabilize the rotation of the ball? But even rifled muzzleloaders designed for bullets or mini-balls tend to have long barrels.
A longer barrel would provide a more accurate sight picture between the front and back sights, right? True, but at such an expense of weight?
Hard to understand.
I have an original smooth rifle with a 49.5" swamped, octagonal, .56 cal./28 ga. barrel, total weight 6 lb. 15 oz., and you couldn't want a more comfortable off-hand gun. My modern 20 ga. flintlock fowler, 46" octagon to round barrel, weighs 8 1/4 lb. I believe there is a significant misconception about the early guns in this respect.Dan Phariss said:This said rifles were generally not excessively heavy. 9 pounds is pretty common and with a swamped barrel they were not all that barrel heavy.
Slow burning? It's classified as an explosive, not a propellant because it burns so fast. Try this, pour a tablespoon of modern rifle powder on the ground and light it. Now do that with a tablespoon of black powder. Got any eyebrows left? That's how fast it burns. Under compression it burns even faster. Audie...the Oldfart.Norinco said:It's still blackpowder and slow burning.
Spence10 said:I have an original smooth rifle with a 49.5" swamped, octagonal, .56 cal./28 ga. barrel, total weight 6 lb. 15 oz., and you couldn't want a more comfortable off-hand gun. My modern 20 ga. flintlock fowler, 46" octagon to round barrel, weighs 8 1/4 lb. I believe there is a significant misconception about the early guns in this respect.Dan Phariss said:This said rifles were generally not excessively heavy. 9 pounds is pretty common and with a swamped barrel they were not all that barrel heavy.
Spence
audie said:Slow burning? It's classified as an explosive, not a propellant because it burns so fast. Try this, pour a tablespoon of modern rifle powder on the ground and light it. Now do that with a tablespoon of black powder. Got any eyebrows left? That's how fast it burns. Under compression it burns even faster. Audie...the Oldfart.Norinco said:It's still blackpowder and slow burning.
I have a Hawken with a 34" x 1" barrel which weighs 9 1/2 lb. I find the smooth rifle "hangs" better for offhand shooting, so I guess length and leverage works better for me than just weight. Might be different for other shooters.Capper said:I have to ask this again. Your 49" barrel weighs less than a 32" Hawken barrel.
Which one will hold better for offhand shooting. I know i was told the longer barrel, but i'm having a hard time wrapping my mind around that. Won't the heavier barrel hold more steady?
Spence10 said:I have a Hawken with a 34" x 1" barrel which weighs 9 1/2 lb. I find the smooth rifle "hangs" better for offhand shooting, so I guess length and leverage works better for me than just weight. Might be different for other shooters.Capper said:I have to ask this again. Your 49" barrel weighs less than a 32" Hawken barrel.
Which one will hold better for offhand shooting. I know i was told the longer barrel, but i'm having a hard time wrapping my mind around that. Won't the heavier barrel hold more steady?
Spence
Sorry, I don't follow that. I said my lighter but longer smooth rifle hangs better for me than the shorter but heavier Hawken, so that, for me, length trumps weight. I thought that was the comparison you were making.Capper said:Yes, but your barrel is short compared to a long rifle.
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