And the longer ya shoot yer rilfle,the further up the barrel the rear sight goes!!!!! Which I'm guessing is why us old farts love our trade guns.
that and the bigger ball makes a bigger hole LOL
I have noticed over the years, the more you shoot your smooth bore, the longer your effective range becomes.
yep . possibly because we dont rely so much on the rear sight but on the hold .
as i have stated before in other posts . there is no reason why a smooth bore will not hold a single hole at 25 yards and a sub 6 inch pattern at 75 .
In not sure if this was lost with the site clean up so ill post it again
Last summer I built a Type D fusil for a customer . He had never shot smoothbore and never shot flintlock .
So when I delivered it was in a place we could do some shooting .
For a load we simply started out with 80 grains of 3 F . a wad over the powder , the ball , then an over the shot card to hold it all in place . NO patches were used .
The first 3 shots where from the bench at 25 yards . Here is his target
I did alittle barrel bending to bring the POA center and we filed the front blade a little. Tell such time as he was shooting just alittle high at 25 .
We then went to shooting off hand at 50 and 75 yards
Here is his 50 and 75 yard target
Now the top ink dot is his 50 yard shooting . As you can see the pattern is under 4 inches . Infact if you discount the fliers , its under 2 inches .
The main bull is his 75 yard target . As you can see the 7 shots are under 6 inches . With one shot he did not follow through , which dropped to the bottom of the target ..
Now again he was a new shooter to both flintlock and smoothbore . But a long time shooter of caplock .
As such with practice and a proper worked up load , there is no reason in my mind that his groups will not tighten up more