Trust me, I dont want to stop at scopes but that is not what has been brought up, it is not what this thread is about.
I would still disagree about 1 or 4 power scopes. I keep my variable scopes on 4X all the time. It is enough to shoot to 500-600 yards. Scopes also allow for the ability to dial and there is a big difference between holding over with iron sights and dialing your scope. Even with some of the advancements in peeps that you can dial with, a scope allows for much much more.
IF I had to concede and allow scopes, take it back to 2016 rules and allow 1X only. I would support a change that would allow for red dots or similar sights that are 1X only.
I’d be fine with 1x, I just shoot better with some type of optic even at close range.
Though it’s not a muzzleloader I am familiar with Vernier sights as I have them on my Sharps and have shot in Buffalo matches out to 200 yards and it is easily doable under the right conditions with prior testing to determine the correct adjustment.
On the flip side I lost out on the opportunity to take a bull bison because it got dark enough I couldn’t confidently take the shot at 100 yards despite there being plenty of daylight. Had this been the last day I would have risked the shot as to not lose out on the thousands it took to get to that point.
Which “advancements in muzzleloader tech” are we talking about and when did all that come about?
You keep throwing out these vague numbers. What load specifically are you referring to that would produce those figures?
I think you’re placing way too much emphasis on bullets/powders and not nearly enough on scopes.
The two big advancements are high bc projectiles like the Parker and Arrowhead bullets and high energy black powder substitutes like BH209. When I was introduced to muzzleloading in the late 2000’s the common muzzleloaders were either flintlocks or inlines using pyrodex pellets and power belt bullets. They shot well enough to kill deer but weren’t accurate enough to shoot past 200 yards with most shots being under 100.
It wasn’t until we got the break action T/C muzzleloaders with the sabots and BH209 that you could confidently shoot past 200 yards but over 300 would be a stretch. The only muzzleloader I would confidently shoot over 300 yards with is my suppressed smokeless muzzleloader, pretty much the most accurate and flattest possible muzzleloader combination.
My trajectory numbers are based on a hypothetical 400gr 50 caliber bullet with a .182 BC being shot at 1200 fps. I just picked a similar weight soft point bullet since most of the lead muzzleloading bullets don’t have a BC listed. This is the type of performance you would get from a caplock shooting black powder with lead bullets.
If bullets and powders didn’t matter then answer this, how far would you shoot at game with a subsonic 300 blackout vs a .300 Win Mag because that is the kind of power/trajectory difference we are talking about. Last time I checked nobody was calling the .300 Blackout a 300+ yard cartridge.