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Wish to build, Smothy or rifled, what are advantages of each ?

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Chuck Yoder

32 Cal.
Joined
Aug 3, 2005
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I am wanting to build another rifle. can't decide whether to build a smooth rifle or one with rifleing. Does a smooth rifle have an advantage ? would like some feedback to help me make the decision.
 
Out to 50 yards it's a wash, and with a smoothy you can fire shot or round balls, a rifle only balls. Question you need to ask yourself, what am I going to use this gun for? Are you comfortable with limiting your shots to around 50 yards? If you plan on one gun to do your hunting, smooth bore gets the nod, if you can afford several, then a rifle is great to have for those longer shots
 
Ya, what ya gonna use it for?

If you run the vous cercuit, shotgun and "trade gun" compition is fun and gives you another thing to do.
 
Besides what has already been said, the smoothbore will also be more challenging to harvest deer and such. Bragging rights. The barrel is also easier to keep clean.
 
I haven't killed a deer at much over 50 yards in years with M.L.er or modern gun. I'm having trouble seeing with iron sights much farther than that in the woods. What's the range with shot for one of these things? Do you need to use a shot cup to knock a squirrel out of the top of a tall tree? I'll bet they are devastating on deer. You smoothbore guys are killing me. Just finished a 40 cal "Hog rifle" and now you got me thinking of a smoothbore. There is no end to this. :idunno: :surrender: :surrender: :thumbsup: :hatsoff:
 
yes, he's right!! there is no end to this... if i had the money, my living room would look like the entryhall of the Governer's Mansion at Colonial Willaimsburg (but each gun would be a little different- you get the idea). ... having said that ...

if i had it all to do over again, i'd have started with a .62/20 ga smoothie, and then built the .36, followed by the .40, and so on ...

you can never be too thin, too rich, or have too many flintlocks!
 
If shooting solid shot the rifle is preferable.
If you shoot small shot the SB is better.

If you only shoot solid shot there is no logical reason to own a smooth bore. The group size of a smooth rifle at 50 yards is about 4 times that of a rifle. I.E. 1" vs 4" to 5".

Dan
 
You say you want to build another Rifle, so I take it you already have at least one. Do you have a Smoothboore "Rifle"? If not, go ahead & crank one out. A smoothbore Rifle with a good tube is a wonderful thing, and properly shot is a Marvel to behold. And there's something about a smoothbore that adds an element of plain old Fun to the whole experience.

Now, let's see...what Style??? One of the most beautiful Pennsylvania Rifles I ever saw was was an early original Lancaster style Smoothie - .58 cal. - Front & rear sights - Octagonal to Round Bbl - with a graceful swamp. Overall the Piece was quite simply but tastefully finished. Weapon was clearly made as a smoothbore - I think it was a Norm Flayderman Gun - don't recall the maker. We had it in the shop for some TLC before putting it on the Auction Block...

Eric

p.s. - Get the absolute best Barrel you can - Alles ist fur nichts, wenn der Lauf ist fur Sh*t...
 
Dan Phariss said:
If shooting solid shot the rifle is preferable.
If you shoot small shot the SB is better.

If you only shoot solid shot there is no logical reason to own a smooth bore. The group size of a smooth rifle at 50 yards is about 4 times that of a rifle. I.E. 1" vs 4" to 5".

Dan
:thumbsup:
 
Well i finally got this pc back working so I can respond. Most of my hunting is for deer and squirrel. The country around here is mostly open but still most shots at deer are 75 yards and under. My biggest concern was, would a cal. between 50 and 58 be adequate with shot for squirrel. and also am concerned with foueling and reloading in hunting situations. I understand smooth bore were quite common during the 1700's with the early settelers so they must have worked quite well even when having to reload fast while protecting their families from the Indians. Plus the fact that their lives depended on their guns being effective for providing food. Maybe rifleing and the abundance and easy access to multiple firearms does away with a "one does it all gun" But i just need to make an other one.
 
Had a TC .56 cal smoothy,,
It was kinda lame, not what I wanted in a "shotgun",,
Finally found a 20ga smoothy to drop-in my stock and couldn't be happier,,at least it takes an ounce of shot.
Ya might think that's heavy fer squirrel, but the ML's don't pattern real easy like the moderns with nice cups and fast powders.
 
Chuck Yoder said:
Well i finally got this pc back working so I can respond. Most of my hunting is for deer and squirrel. The country around here is mostly open but still most shots at deer are 75 yards and under. My biggest concern was, would a cal. between 50 and 58 be adequate with shot for squirrel. and also am concerned with foueling and reloading in hunting situations. I understand smooth bore were quite common during the 1700's with the early settelers so they must have worked quite well even when having to reload fast while protecting their families from the Indians. Plus the fact that their lives depended on their guns being effective for providing food. Maybe rifleing and the abundance and easy access to multiple firearms does away with a "one does it all gun" But i just need to make an other one.

The shot guns costs more to shoot and there is nothing it will do the rifle will not unless shooting flying birds. Given the way the shotguns of the 18th century were wadded, with tow, means they were less effective than those MLs in use today with cut pasteboard wads.
In any case shooting an ounce of shot at an animal that 1/3 or 1/10 ounce of lead will kill makes no financial sense. This has been true since colonial times and one of the reasons natives were encouraged to use smoothbores. THEY USED MORE LEAD AND POWDER. The reduced powder and lead used by the rifle was specifically pointed out in the the 1760s. It was also more effective in war in terms of the native and the frontiersman who did not conduct war using linear tactics.
By the 1740s a significnt number of natives were using rifles by the 1760s this was a major concern among traders and the indian agents. This is detailed in DeWitt Bailey's "British Military Flintlock Rifles".
If you live along the great lakes or some other region with large numbers of water fowl the shotgun has some appeal. But this does not apply to a great many Americans living in the interior in Colonial times.
Muskets were dirt cheap but were so inaccurate and used so much ammo (1 1/8 ounce or more per shot and the powder to drive it) that for other than European style warfare it was just to expensive to use.
If a rifle using 40 to the pound will do the same thing the 12 to the pound musket who wants the musket?
Smooth rifles, IMO, are greatly over represented in the surviving colonial guns since when the bores became too large from repeated freshings to make a useful rifle for the current usage they were bored for shot or simply never recut to restore them to accuracy. I am told that many supposed smooth rifles have vestiges of rifling.
In the cities in the east the only use many had for a gun was militia duty. On the frontier where having a useful weapon was a necessity rifles were far more common.
YOUR choice is yours of course but a 50 caliber rifle is a near perfect deer rifle in the east and the 45 is very useful. Either could be used for small game. But if the shots for deer are under 50 yards a 40 would work if legal. Shot placement is the key.
War in the forest?
Fast reloading with the enemy 50 yards away or less in the forest is a pipe dream. 100 yards might give you time to get loaded without a patch or with a SB. But the rifle in good hands in pretty sure of a man to 150 so 100 is not a difficult shot if shot prone or rested on a tree as was common practice by both frontiersman and natives.
At Saratoga the British allied natives and French Canadian scouts were so frightened of Moragan's riflemen they mostly went home. The few that staid would not go into the woods to scout. This by the accounts of British officers serving with Burgoyne who were outraged.
So while its nice to quote the Generals scoffing at the rifle as a weapon of war one must consider their needs and point of view. They needed, or thought they did, line infantry with bayonet equipped muskets. But several key battles in the Revolution were won or made more favorable for the US with rifles.
Kings Mountain was a major blow to the British in the south by their own account. Before King's Mountain the south was thought to be theirs. After King's Mountain it was ours. They could no longer recruit loyalists.

I suggest reading "The Frontier Rifleman" by LaCrosse and Huddleston's "Colonial Riflemen in The American Revolution" along with Bailey's book mentioned above.
Dan
 
Dan Phariss said:
The shot guns costs more to shoot and there is nothing it will do the rifle will not unless shooting flying birds. Given the way the shotguns of the 18th century were wadded, with tow, means they were less effective than those MLs in use today with cut pasteboard wads.
In any case shooting an ounce of shot at an animal that 1/3 or 1/10 ounce of lead will kill makes no financial sense. This has been true since colonial times and one of the reasons natives were encouraged to use smoothbores. THEY USED MORE LEAD AND POWDER. The reduced powder and lead used by the rifle was specifically pointed out in the the 1760s. It was also more effective in war in terms of the native and the frontiersman who did not conduct war using linear tactics.
By the 1740s a significnt number of natives were using rifles by the 1760s this was a major concern among traders and the indian agents. This is detailed in DeWitt Bailey's "British Military Flintlock Rifles".
If you live along the great lakes or some other region with large numbers of water fowl the shotgun has some appeal. But this does not apply to a great many Americans living in the interior in Colonial times.
Muskets were dirt cheap but were so inaccurate and used so much ammo (1 1/8 ounce or more per shot and the powder to drive it) that for other than European style warfare it was just to expensive to use.
If a rifle using 40 to the pound will do the same thing the 12 to the pound musket who wants the musket?
Smooth rifles, IMO, are greatly over represented in the surviving colonial guns since when the bores became too large from repeated freshings to make a useful rifle for the current usage they were bored for shot or simply never recut to restore them to accuracy. I am told that many supposed smooth rifles have vestiges of rifling.
In the cities in the east the only use many had for a gun was militia duty. On the frontier where having a useful weapon was a necessity rifles were far more common.
YOUR choice is yours of course but a 50 caliber rifle is a near perfect deer rifle in the east and the 45 is very useful. Either could be used for small game. But if the shots for deer are under 50 yards a 40 would work if legal. Shot placement is the key.
War in the forest?
Fast reloading with the enemy 50 yards away or less in the forest is a pipe dream. 100 yards might give you time to get loaded without a patch or with a SB. But the rifle in good hands in pretty sure of a man to 150 so 100 is not a difficult shot if shot prone or rested on a tree as was common practice by both frontiersman and natives.
At Saratoga the British allied natives and French Canadian scouts were so frightened of Moragan's riflemen they mostly went home. The few that staid would not go into the woods to scout. This by the accounts of British officers serving with Burgoyne who were outraged.
So while its nice to quote the Generals scoffing at the rifle as a weapon of war one must consider their needs and point of view. They needed, or thought they did, line infantry with bayonet equipped muskets. But several key battles in the Revolution were won or made more favorable for the US with rifles.
Kings Mountain was a major blow to the British in the south by their own account. Before King's Mountain the south was thought to be theirs. After King's Mountain it was ours. They could no longer recruit loyalists.

I suggest reading "The Frontier Rifleman" by LaCrosse and Huddleston's "Colonial Riflemen in The American Revolution" along with Bailey's book mentioned above.
Dan

Good post however there is one huge fact that you left out, start shooting elk or buffalo with your small caliber rifles. If you are talking about only owning one gun and it has to do everything, the smoothbore starts making a bit more sense, even though it is not as economical. I have done quite a bit of squirrel hunting with my 50 and if I don't hit them in the head there is not much left, even with reduced loads, you can buy a lot of powder and shot for the price of a second rifle. Chris
 
Chuck Yoder said:
Well i finally got this pc back working so I can respond. Most of my hunting is for deer and squirrel. The country around here is mostly open but still most shots at deer are 75 yards and under. My biggest concern was, would a cal. between 50 and 58 be adequate with shot for squirrel. and also am concerned with foueling and reloading in hunting situations. I understand smooth bore were quite common during the 1700's with the early settelers so they must have worked quite well even when having to reload fast while protecting their families from the Indians. Plus the fact that their lives depended on their guns being effective for providing food. Maybe rifleing and the abundance and easy access to multiple firearms does away with a "one does it all gun" But i just need to make an other one.

I wouldn't even consider a smoothie for squirrel. Why pick out all of those pellets when ya can shoot one in the head with a good .40 cal ball out of a rifled barrel ? And allot less expense to shoot.

Now upland game shooting, I can see where you could utilize the smoothie.. or close range deer hunting 50 yds, it could work if you can get a good halfway accurate load out of it.

But otherwise, I would go with a rifled barrel.

Keith Lisle
 
August West said:
Dan Phariss said:
The shot guns costs more to shoot and there is nothing it will do the rifle will not unless shooting flying birds. Given the way the shotguns of the 18th century were wadded, with tow, means they were less effective than those MLs in use today with cut pasteboard wads.
In any case shooting an ounce of shot at an animal that 1/3 or 1/10 ounce of lead will kill makes no financial sense. This has been true since colonial times and one of the reasons natives were encouraged to use smoothbores. THEY USED MORE LEAD AND POWDER. The reduced powder and lead used by the rifle was specifically pointed out in the the 1760s. It was also more effective in war in terms of the native and the frontiersman who did not conduct war using linear tactics.
By the 1740s a significnt number of natives were using rifles by the 1760s this was a major concern among traders and the indian agents. This is detailed in DeWitt Bailey's "British Military Flintlock Rifles".
If you live along the great lakes or some other region with large numbers of water fowl the shotgun has some appeal. But this does not apply to a great many Americans living in the interior in Colonial times.
Muskets were dirt cheap but were so inaccurate and used so much ammo (1 1/8 ounce or more per shot and the powder to drive it) that for other than European style warfare it was just to expensive to use.
If a rifle using 40 to the pound will do the same thing the 12 to the pound musket who wants the musket?
Smooth rifles, IMO, are greatly over represented in the surviving colonial guns since when the bores became too large from repeated freshings to make a useful rifle for the current usage they were bored for shot or simply never recut to restore them to accuracy. I am told that many supposed smooth rifles have vestiges of rifling.
In the cities in the east the only use many had for a gun was militia duty. On the frontier where having a useful weapon was a necessity rifles were far more common.
YOUR choice is yours of course but a 50 caliber rifle is a near perfect deer rifle in the east and the 45 is very useful. Either could be used for small game. But if the shots for deer are under 50 yards a 40 would work if legal. Shot placement is the key.
War in the forest?
Fast reloading with the enemy 50 yards away or less in the forest is a pipe dream. 100 yards might give you time to get loaded without a patch or with a SB. But the rifle in good hands in pretty sure of a man to 150 so 100 is not a difficult shot if shot prone or rested on a tree as was common practice by both frontiersman and natives.
At Saratoga the British allied natives and French Canadian scouts were so frightened of Moragan's riflemen they mostly went home. The few that staid would not go into the woods to scout. This by the accounts of British officers serving with Burgoyne who were outraged.
So while its nice to quote the Generals scoffing at the rifle as a weapon of war one must consider their needs and point of view. They needed, or thought they did, line infantry with bayonet equipped muskets. But several key battles in the Revolution were won or made more favorable for the US with rifles.
Kings Mountain was a major blow to the British in the south by their own account. Before King's Mountain the south was thought to be theirs. After King's Mountain it was ours. They could no longer recruit loyalists.

I suggest reading "The Frontier Rifleman" by LaCrosse and Huddleston's "Colonial Riflemen in The American Revolution" along with Bailey's book mentioned above.
Dan

Good post however there is one huge fact that you left out, start shooting elk or buffalo with your small caliber rifles. If you are talking about only owning one gun and it has to do everything, the smoothbore starts making a bit more sense, even though it is not as economical. I have done quite a bit of squirrel hunting with my 50 and if I don't hit them in the head there is not much left, even with reduced loads, you can buy a lot of powder and shot for the price of a second rifle. Chris

They used to bark squirrels with the rifle.
I would also point out that there is little left of a squirrel shot in the body with a 32. I have hunted them with 32-36-40 calibers and all will generally remove the head. So the "50 is destructive on squirrels" argument is not valid. You have to bark them or use head shots regardless.

Most rifles would have been in the 44-50 caliber range IMO. This is hard to refute when people like Col. Hanger states he never saw a rifle over 36 to the pound though he had examined "many hundreds". Were some larger, sure. But typical was “probably” around 48.
Surviving rifles in England from the Rev-War period, where they saw no or little use being brought home as trophies are often under 50 caliber. See the "Thomas Rifle" #121 in RCA, 47 caliber. Its a SC rifle that was captured and carried back to England.
Number 108 is in England as well its 45.
#96 is in England in very nice condition and is 42 caliber.
There is a Peter Resor rifle in “Steel Canvas” its .42 and predates the Revolution.
Then we have John Joseph Henry in his description of the rifle he bought to replace one lost in a river crossing enroute to Quebec in 1775. It was 45 to the pound (.48 ball) and from his words we get the idea that its BIGGER than the rifle he lost. Its also "short". He thought it was extremely effective and useful.
This can be found in his journal or in Huddleston's book.
So we have quite a number of rifles or descriptions that point out that the bores were in the 44 to 50 caliber range and Hanger telling us he never saw one over about 52 caliber.
There are larger bored rifles that have returned from Europe. The Schriet rifle is 58 IIRC but we have no idea when it was taken to Europe.
Surviving rifles in America were often heavily used till the Civil War era. So a rifle that started as a 44 could easily be a 54 or larger or bored smooth by the time it was retired. Freshing was a common thing for rifles of the time.
Boring rifle muskets for shot was common in the post Civil War period

At the ranges one can reliably kill big game with a smoothbore its possible to HEAD shoot deer and elk or buffalo (from the side at least forehead on a buffalo is tough) with a smaller caliber rifle or even shoot them in the chest with a 44 and up. I have a friend who shot a cow elk in the forehead with a 50 caliber pistol with a 6" barrel and the ball passed through the head completely and IIRC broke the neck as well.
I don't think the buffalo was a major factor, they were susceptible to domestic cattle diseases in the west and I suspect this was true in the east as well. So they were probably not a factor in caliber selection and even then a 48-50 would work if used right.
And finally if powerhouses like the standard 22 RF short will kill deer with a chest shot I doubt the 44-45 caliber rifle is tremendously inadequate for elk. My grandfather killed a WT buck in his mothers garden when he was a kid with a 22 short. This would have likely been circa 1900
Would a 45 be my first choice for elk TODAY? No.
But 1760-1780 is not today. The attitudes and hunting techniques were different.

The ball size only need be adequate. There was a reason why the hunters used lung shots. A 62 should do well with shoulder shots on an elk. But with smaller bores, even the 54, the heavy bones should be avoided. So they used lung shots.
Parkman describes the shooting of 2 buffalo at 175 yards with the plains rifles of the mid-1840's. Stating that the lungs were the true mark in shooting buffalo. They ran off but died within 1/2 mile. The fact they did not die on the spot was of no concern. Assuming 54 caliber rifles, being very typical of the time, we can further assume the ball size was adequate for animals this size at this range. A far tougher critter than elk or even Black Bear. People I trust tell me a 54 is death on moose with a RB.
Why did the larger bores become popular out here? THE RANGES ARE FAR GREATER for one thing.
P1000851.jpg

I killed a doe about 300 yards in front of the camera location with a FL and a buck on the hills in the distance. There were others but some were with 45-70 etc.
Finally if the SB makes more sense why were there so many rifles on the frontier where the gun was used to feed the family to a greater extent? The Rev-war rifle companies came from PA, VA, MD and often from the frontier. RIFLE companies. So we can infer the rifle was adequate for use on the frontier. We already have several period discussions of bore size and while there were surely variations both larger and smaller I suspect the 50 to 40 to the pound was a useful caliber based on the history and personal experience. For example I have recreated the 300 yard shot that is credited with killing Frasier at Saratoga with 50 caliber flintlock. So I know it could have been done with a rifle of this bore size, a 54 or 58 or 62 was not needed to shoot with reasonable accuracy at this distance.

This from pg 76 of Bailey.
The letter quoted is from 30 Nov 1756 concerning the Upper Creeks.
"...Indians are daily getting in to the Method of using Riffle Guns instead of Traders which they purchase where ever they can at monstrous Price, as they can kill point Blank at two hundred Yards distance. ...As the people who sell them to the Indians are generally very poor, their gun being the Greatest part of their Estate, a Fine would be of little or no Effect..."
He was attempting to find a way to discourage the selling of rifles to the natives. We also learn that the poor on the frontier were rifle armed. Why would this be if the smoothbore was the best choice for the poor on the frontier. We can then assume the the poor pioneer than either bought a new rifle and used the excess to improve his lot or bought 2 and sold one to the natives and used this money to make his lot in life better ?????
In any event we see a repeating statement that the natives would pay very high prices for rifles.
Before thinking the smoothbore was the best answer to every question you must ask why the frontier was the realm of the rifle. Why would the natives pay a "monstrous price" for one?
Bailey's book is very informative and for people interested in the rifle in America its required reading just for the chapters on Loyalist Riflemen and the Indian rifles if nothing else.
But current wisdom lauds the smoothbore and there is evidence to support this as well, a smooth rifle is better than a musket but its not a rifle and the only advantage it has is in the fact the barrel costs less to make.
The natives on the upper Missouri would not carry a smoothbore of this weight since it was much heavier, cost more and was in reality no more effective than a cheaper and lighter trade gun.

BUT if someone wants a smooth rifle or fowler or musket its THEIR decision. But it needs to be based on some information.
The question was asked and I gave MY opinion based on my 45+ years of shooting MLs and research.
Dan
 
Well alrighty then.

Frankly I am a hunter and shooter, and shoot and hunt with what pleases me and what works well. I am sure your documentation is correct and is interesting to reenactors or trekkers, however the OP asked the pros and cons of rifles and smoothbores not which one was used when and where. I am not a living historian, there is zero chance that I will trade my danners for homemade moccasins in the forseeable future, likewise, if my guns are not perfectly HC I really could care less.

You mentioned that you have 44 years of experience, that is relevant how? Fact of the matter is, there is no do everything gun, rifle or smoothbore, in the swamps and thickets of the southeast where I hunt the smoothbore is the better choice IMO, I have never been to montana, I am sure your choice worksfor you there. Again IMO, if you are going to shoot feral pigs anything below 50 is too light, big boar's cartiledge shield can be real thick and tough and the little fellers probably won't get through it, your mention of headshots only is just silly. Conversly anything over 50 is grossly too large for small game, I have 30 years of experience myself and have shot a lot of critters with a lot of calibers and as I said, anything but a headshot destroys too much meat. You mentioned barking squirrels, well sir that is a myth, it is possible, but not with any degree of reliability. I have tried with multiple rifles, both modern and blackpowder and you might get 1 out of 10 squirrels "barking " them.

I hunt whitetail deer, feral hogs, wild turkeys and small game all with the same gun and keep my freezer full. My 20 bore is not HC or PC but in the swamps I call home it works and works well. You posted a pic of where you hunt, I would be remiss if I didn't do the same, I killed a 300 lb+ hog at less than 20 yds not far from where this pic was taken.Chris

Picture044.jpg
 
with shot loads, your smoothbore is just as effective as any other cylinder bore shotgun. modern or otherwise. you do have the option of jug chokeing the barrel as well. btw, a 4-5" group is still minute of whitetail. since frontier economics aren't an issue anymore, get whatever you want.
 
poor medical care and knowledge killed frasier. it took him several days to die. that .50 ball at 300 yrds has about as much energy as a 22.
 
Thanks everyone. Very interesting opinions. I appreciate you shareing your experiences. I just ordered a halfstock blank from TOW and will restock a Vincent 40 cal. I built earlier. My first attempt was not to my liking and since it was my first attempt at building a stock from a blank and not sure of my ability, I picked a plain cheap piece of maple for my first try so if I screwed it up I wouldn't be out too much money. It came out much better than I thought I would be able to do. But since it was just a plain Jane no figure stock I decided to replace it with one with good figure.
So maybe when I finish with this Vincent I'll, hopefully be ready for another fullstock.

Thanks again everyone.
 
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