I pretty much agree with everything you've written in your reply, but you left out something very important.The thing is, Whelen was a consummate rifleman. A rifle that could just keep its shots on a pie plate at a hundred yards would have bored the #### out of him, as it would me and probably you. If I'm being honest I would sell a rifle that was only that accurate so fast that it would leave a dust trail.
Some people are just perfectly satisfied with the pie plate rifle. They probably even kill a deer or two with it every year. But they're just consumers looking to put meat in the freezer, which is a great thing. But I'm not just trying to put meat in the freezer. I want to test a rifle, to see what it is capable of. What powder does it prefer? What bullet? Brand and type of primer? Brand of case? Neck size of FL? That's the real fun part for me, and that's the difference between a rifleman and a hunter. One person will buy whatever brand of ammo they have at the local Co-Op or Canadian Tire and be happy so long as it goes bang and kills a deer. A rifleman won't. Neither one is more right or wrong than the other...it just depends what game you're playing at.
So, from Whelen's perspective, I agree 100%...only accurate rifles are interesting.
Whelen was first shooting black powder type firearms and got used to the incredible accuracy that can be achieved with consistent powder, percussion caps, and lead quality, along with proper patch size and load density. Then he was very involved with the transition period from black powder to smokeless powder and had some considerable influence on which components and firearms the US military would use.
I believe he was first more interested in hunting accuracy, as a very young man, then later in putting together components that would be consistently accurate within the specifications of the US military.
I've often felt that his oft quoted comment "Only accurate rifles are interesting," was misconstrued by many people reading the quote over the years.
There was a time when Mr Whelan felt the 30-30 Winchester was the best hunting cartridge going. He used a Model 94 Winchester on several big game hunts all over the US and in even in British Columbia and Alberta.
He made that comment when an accurate rifle was one that would consistantly shoot into 3 inches or slightly less at 100 yds.
Of course, he would have loved more accuracy, but I did see a letter he had written to Elmer Kieth about the accuracy of jacketed bullets and commercial loadings, when comparing them to military loadings and those to black powder charges with cast and even jacketed bullets.
He wrote a brief sentence about BP loads for 45-70 chambered rifles often exceeding accuracy requirements, while modern smokeless loads always struggled, other than the very odd lot.


















































