I set aside a little time this morning to do some practice. I wanted to verify that I
could shoot 50 yards in the pecan orchard without getting fouled in the tree limbs, and to get some idea as to the charge for this range. No grid, just a stake at 50 yards.
In most places, the tree limbs come together from each side and meet each other, and there is limited overhead. But there is an area where there is a clearing of sorts, where the limbs seem to part and don't quite meet. I situated my rig so that this would be roughly at the apex of the trajectory. It was enough, barely. Any significantly longer range wouldn't have been possible.
I had intended to shoot practice last Saturday, then shoot for score on Sunday. The weather was perfect. But on the preceding Thursday there was a death at one of the homes on the far side of the orchard (I didn't know them personally). They had friends and family visiting the home on Saturday and the funeral was Sunday. I felt it would be extremely disrespectful to be out in the orchard shooting.
I used my Lee dippers, and GOEX FFFg powder. Just on a hunch, I started with the 2.8cc dipper, which throws an average of 41.6 grains. The very first shot, from a clean bore, fell just beyond the stake and rolled to a stop about 18' past and 1' to the right. The next shot was from a fouled bore and went about another 20' hooking hard to the right after impact. So I backed down to 2.5cc, or 36.4 grains, and the next shot hit shy and rolled to a stop about 4' past and almost directly behind the stake.
I was quite proud of myself, but you know what they say about pride...
This is where a couple of things became apparent. First, ignition was much more consistent with these charges. But fouling has become an issue. Ignition was so inconsistent at 30 yards that fouling never entered the equation. As fouling increased, so did pressure variations. Soon I was overshooting the stake on some shots, and falling way short on others, and it couldn't be blamed on ignition.
Second, the balls need to be clean. I went out with a half-dozen of my previously fired, but washed, balls and they all did great until about the third firing when they were grimy with BP fouling and dirt. On such a light ball, the grime has a detectable effect on the way (and how far) they fly. A golfer probably would already know this, but the GB mortar and the local putt-putt range are the extent of my golfing experience.
I have two fresh boxes (24 total) of recycled balls, still unopened, for the BINGO match. Each will be shot only once. Hopefully this will be enough.
So, with weather looming, I went inside and got my 'poofy'. I don't have a photo of the 'poofy', but I will take one when its dry and reassembled. It's basically a small paint roller stuck into the end of a larger one. It's what I built to clean the bore and chamber when I'm washing the mortar up after shooting, but before today I had never used it in the field.
I gathered up all the balls and started over. This time I worked the 'poofy' into the bore and chamber between each loading and dragged out all the excess gunk. I also wiped down the balls with a damp cloth before they were loaded.
Things improved immediately. With the dry-swabbed bore and cleaned balls, the 2.5cc FFFg charge started putting the shots back on target.
This was one of the final rounds of shots. When I walked out to get a closer look, I went back for the camera to get proof. All six balls are in this photo.
I fired a couple more rounds of shots, but wasn't able to duplicate this again. Even so, I was putting about 75% of the balls within the area where the grid would be.
I took this photo while I was waiting between shots. The stake is practically invisible in this reduced photo, so I have it circled in yellow.
And of course the essential (albeit crappy) "Smoke & Fire" pics.
Hopefully next weekend I'll get to shoot the actual match. I put down marker stakes so that I can set up without have to measure off the 50 yards again.