When we went shooting two days ago, RocklockI, Gary, brought his new 1/3 scale Confederate smoothbore Parrott made by Dominick along to mainly find out if accurately made sabots could help with accuracy. They did! Although more accuracy methods need to be tried,
he improved a lot over the previous shoot where one or two hits on the target at 60 yards were the results of about ten fired. That was with steel shot taped over powder. This time we used the same size steel solid shot, Gary's carefully made ball dia. powder charges, and Mikes carefully turned poplar sabots which were .020" under the bore size which is 1.750" and 1.25" long. Epoxy glue held everything together. Accuracy improved about 700%. The photo captions reveal the details.
Regards,
Tracy and Mike
The solid shot "fixed round" is at the left next to the longer canister round. The shot dia. is 1.68"
Gary loads the fixed round of solid shot into the tube using the safety rammer.
3 GB shots above target paper. 2 hits and a sabot hit on upper right edged of target paper. All sabots remains whole when shooting GBs.
group size unknown, with one missing ball, but AT LEAST 16 inches at 75 feet range. In the target paper we have an 8.5" group where the steel solid shot hit. One sabot, or about 1/2 of one sabot hit adjacent to the shot hit at 5 o'clock. All sabots broke when shooting the steel shot. Powder charge was the same as the GB rounds, 400 grains BP. Seemed to be enough, with a nice Crack! sound and velocity.
The higher velocity from a more complete burn and much more weight, 11.32 oz, provided cleaner holes in the target than the GBs and very long grooves in the prairie. The one on the right is 16 feet and the other one, 11 feet. We never noticed these grooves with our Parrott or Brooke bolts. They usually gouge out an 18 in. long by 3 in. wide divot about 2 or 3 times as deep as the half a ball depth of the round shot grooves.