Feather,
Hmmm... Well so much for the hard lube idea. Altho you say your lube is hard and sticky I was thinking of something along the lines of a crayon type hardness. This probably wouldn't be any good shooting BP dirty, but I see no reason it wouldn't work if you wiped the bore after every shot like we would do in Schuetzen, or some Shilouette shooters are doing. There only has to be enuf lube to applied to do the job, and I would think that if a hard lube works on pistols with there lower velocitys and slower twists, I would think it would work in any of our rifles.
But, I don't know that for a fact as I'm one of those believers that if it isn't soft and sticky it ain't lube!
I also can't say about finding lube around the bullet holes at over 200 yds. as it's been a few years since I've shot past that.
Old-Win,
I'm not saying there might not be a problem with accuracy if the lube slings off the bullet at odd distances, just that there might not be to. I'm a great believer in trying to eliminate as many of the small variables as possible since severl small variations will add up to one big one. And as you say.... an inch at 100 yds. is ten at a 1000. Actually a LOT more since things don't increase on an equal basis. It's why 1" groups at 100 yds. don't really translate into 2" at 200.
Your thoughts on larger calibers not being as accurate as the smaller one is well taken, and I believe to be true. It could very well be that things like lube cause these inaccuracies. But, I've shot a LOT of big bore off the type rests we use in Schuetzen and I'd say the problem is the same as you've noticed.
To me this inaccuracy of the big bores is due to the added recoil these guns have. A big gap diffrence in calibers to use as an example. A .22 can either be let lay in the bags and you only touch the gun by squeezing the trigger with the thumb and foefinger. Try that with you .50/90!
The larger the caliber the more you have to guide the gun as it recoils in the bags, or off the cross sticks. This is imperfect at best, and as you know takes a lot of practice to do consistently. With the big guns you also have torque. The best you can do is to guide it, and try to get it to move exactly the same with each shot. The smaller the caliber the easier this all gets to be. This is why when I set up on the cross sticks, or a bench rest, I try to do so so that the gun comes back in as straight a line with the target as possible.
To kind of point some of this up...... A .38/55 is considered by many to be the top end for shooting in Schuetzen. I have a "sled" attached to the barrel of mine which is used to allow a straight back and consistent movement under recoil. But, if you're paying attention when the gun goes off you can also see the left leg of the "sled" rise up off the plate it's resting on. With the "sled" attached to my .32/40 you don't see this rise.
PETE