Do "light" balls have air bubbles, impurities, or voids that make them out of balance and cause flyers?
Last Friday I conducted a shooting experiment that consited of shooting two 5-shot/50 yard groups with the balls weighing exactly the same and two 5-shot/50 yard groups with each ball weighing at least two grains different from all other balls. These balls were given to me and, as far as I know, were all cast from the same mold.
Here my report, with the targets.
The gun - .54 Great Plains flintlock with Lyman 57 peep sight, shot from a bench with a Caldwell shooting rest under the barrel and rabbit ear bag under the buttstock.
All shots were with weighed charges of 85 grains GOEX FFFg, using .016 thick patches lubed with olive oil. The patches were lubed Thursday night and placed in a stack. The stack was wrapped in a double layer of paper towels and placed under a weight to squeeze out excess oil overnight and assure all patches had an equal amount of lube.
I used a ball seating rod with a "stop collar" that I set upon loading the first ball. So all balls were seated in exactly the same place in the barrel with exactly the same seating pressure.
The first shot on the first target was from a clean oiled barrel that I swabbed with a dry patch before loading. After the first shot I swabbed the bore with both sides of one 91% alcohol patch, followed by one side of a clean dry patch. I followed that same swabbing procedure after each succeeding shot.
Target #87 - All balls weighed exactly 234.5 grains. Group size was
2 & 1/4".
Target #88 - One ball of each of the following weights - 228.5 grains / 230.0 grains / 231.5 grains / 233.5 grains / 235.0 grains. Group size was
2 & 1/8" (with 4 of the shots into 1 & 1/8").
Target #89 - All balls weighed exactly 234.5 grains. Group size was
1 & 3/4".
Target #90 - One ball of each of the following weights - 228.5 grains / 230.0 grains / 231.5 grains / 233.5 grains / 235.0 grains. Group size was
1 & 5/8" (with 4 of the shots into 1 & 1/8").
I do believe you can draw your own conclusions. As for me, I sure won't be wasting my time weighing balls.
SOME GENERAL COMMENTS: I was really concentrating on shooting technique, trigger pull and sight picture. At no time during this session did I feel I made a bad shot. I may even have been extra careful shooting the groups with the assorted weight balls. As for the first target with the largest overall group (by a small margin) - I'll say that it's not unusual for me that my first group in a shooting session is a little larger than following groups. I probably should have shot a "dummy" group first just to get my technique settled in. My eyesight makes iron sight shooting a bit challenging, even with the Lyman peep. I suspect a good iron sight shooter could really stack them in with this gun and load.
Here are the targets.
HEY! Did you notice something??? I shot the first two targets with round patches and the second two with square patches - all cut from the same patch material. Not a penny's worth of difference between the two.
Well, the gun was dirty, the weather was nice, and I had plenty of preloaded powder tubes. So just for the heck of it I shot another group with matched weight balls, but added a wonder wad under the ball. Got a good group, but not significantly different from the others. Here's the target.
Does anyone feel like weighing their balls, or cutting round patches?
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My wife says I'm totally nuts, but I think I'm Semisane.
". . . the more power we give the government the more corrupt it will become . . ." Ronald Reagan