VINTAGE RIFLES AND TWIST RATES
Rifle|July - August 2021
DOWN RANGE
Mike Venturino
VINTAGE RIFLES AND TWIST RATES

The last four decades of the nineteenth century were a time of great learning in regard to metallic cartridges and their rifles. Prior to that, most rifled barrels were not meant for bullets – as in elongated projectiles. Most civilian rifles were muzzleloaders shooting round balls, or in military usage, muzzleloading rifle-muskets that shot Minié balls. Those firearms were rifled with very slow rifling twists, often as slow as 1:72.

Nowadays, we speak of certain weights of bullets requiring certain rifling twists. An example is a box of Sierra .224-inch, 80-grain HPBTs stating on the label that barrels with 1:7 to 1:8 twists were needed. Actually, our modern method is slightly incorrect, as it is not the weight of the bullets that require certain rifling twists, but their lengths. In fact, in its 1870’s packaging of ammunition for Sharps rifles, the Union Metallic Cartridge Company included bullet length on its labels. For example, a 550-grain .45 bullet was 113⁄32 inches in length. A .44 bullet of 500 grains was 13⁄8 inches long.

This story is from the July - August 2021 edition of Rifle.

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This story is from the July - August 2021 edition of Rifle.

Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 8,500+ magazines and newspapers.