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Some firearms are still made smoothbore. The most common of these is the shotgun. Firing mutiple, non coaxial projectiles out of a rifled barrel would result in an "O" shaped pattern, with a very rapid spread, a high projectile density on the periphery, and a low projectile density in the interior. This is the exact opposite of the desired even distribution, with an fairly even number of pellets across a carefully expanding region.
The other type of smoothbore that has come into use over the last part of the 20th century is the tank gun. Practical rifling can only stabilize projectiles of a certain length to diameter ratio. To reliably penetrate the thick armor of modern armored vehicles, a very long, thin kinetic energy projectile is required--too long to stabilize with rifling. These round are instead formed into a dart shape, using fins for stabilization (see Kinetic energy penetrator for information on how this works). With the fins for stability, rifling is no longer needed and in fact the spin imparted by rifling will degrade the accuracy of a finned projectile. Because of the increasing use of the highly effective Kinetic energy penetrator projectiles by tank guns, most modern tanks have smoothbore barrels.
Artillery Firearms