I decided that my trigger finger was good enough to put back in service so this morning I sat down to do the shooting with tow. Temperature was 68 F, humidity 27%, and winds 10-20 mph. Thankfully the wind was from directly behind me. The distance was 21 yards and I was shooting from a bench.
I dry patched the bore to remove excess oil and fired a fouling charge. I wiped the bore using a patch dampened with the 7:1 water/Ballistol solution. There's no easy way to be sure I'm getting the same amount of tow each time so I went for eyeballing it. Again, I was using a 75 gr FFg powder charge. My sequence was load, fire, wipe with damp patch, and repeat.
Some time ago I evaluated a 20 bore smoothie for accuracy. In that test using tow gave groups almost as good as a PRB. I was really curious to see if this held true with the Bess. I fired five shots and the result is shown in the photo. Once again, PRB wins but not by a great deal. I wouldn't hesitate to use either one for hunting at this range. With more testing I may be extending that range.
Here are my final thoughts on this Made in India Bess. I actually got more gun than I expected for $525 plus shipping. It's accuracy potential is great. I would advise potential buyers to accept from the outset that you may have some lock tuning to do or have done. However you will NOT have to harden the frizzen which is common on some factory guns. Remember, MVTC has an excellent warranty.
At this time I have the Bess listed on the Trade Blanket as for sale or trade. I'm looking for a 20 gauge in trade and I won't turn my nose up at it if you bought it from MVTC. If the Bess sells I intend to buy one of their Fusil deChasse guns. My reason is simple. A 20 uses less lead than a 12. I also will not be disappointed if Bess remains here with me. She is a great girl.
Storm