smoothshooter
50 Cal.
First off, grease over the chambers doesn’t have any effect on chain-fires, contrary to what a lot of people will tell you. Loose caps, or WAAAYYY undersized balls CAN cause that. If you ever have a chain-fire, it is unnerving, but will not damage you or the gun. Identify the problem, fix it on the spot if you can, reload, suck it up and go on.Just picked me up my first pistol (.36 cal.)& wondered why I found two really different loads.? :: One says 9-12 & other 22 gr. of triple F. 9 is a long way from 22!!!
I'd sure appreciate any tips on loading too. What do you use to over fill the powder before wad. What's best to use to seal everything? Crisco?
Thanks
In the old days almost no one ever used greased wads and they for darned sure didn’t put grease over the chamber mouths. They loaded and shot everything dry.
Also keep in mind you are not having to choose your powder charges as carefully as if you were loading smokeless in metallic cartridges. A lot of new black powder shooters have a lot of trouble getting out of that mentality, especially if they have some metallic cartridge loading experience.
The bottom line is that unless you are engaged in some serious competition, powder charges really don’t matter much as long as they are fairly consistent in weight. Load by volume. As long as the powder charge leaves enough room to seat the ball, you are good.
I am a believer in using thin lubricated felt wads that you should be making yourself (because of the ridiculous prices that retail sellers get). Seat these on top of each powder charge under the ball. They are for keeping the fouling in the barrel down somewhat ONLY.
Don’t make shooting these things more complicated than it needs to be.
I have been carrying and shooting them for years while working in the woods cutting down trees for firewood, clearing brush, splitting wood, fixing fences, target practice, etc., off and on for years. Some of the places I was doing work had a lot of copperheads in warmer weather, and I always shoot them on sight.
I have gotten older, and don’t get the opportunities to shoot quite as much as I used to, but I’m still doing it occasionally.
The two revolvers I have always used the most have been tweaked a little by me, and are monotonously reliable.