azmntman said:
Courtesy Translation: Alden recommends only 2f per basics of 3f up to .45 and 2f for larger. Your welcome! :grin:
In the late 60's there was an elderly gent I'd always see at the range who shot flintlocks. All originals & part of a family legacy passed down thru generations, he even had lots of documentation about how to load & fire. From his description, there was a lot of contradictory information about loads & powder granulation (if mentioned at all). He taught me how to load & fire a flintlock, and from the reading I did and info I was able to get from the Golden Age Arms shop downtown where I lived, the wisdom was 3F for smaller bores, and 2F for anything over .50 cal.
When I asked the old gent about proper powder, he replied that they used whatever was at hand. All he had was 3F (some of the powder cans looked ancient), and most of his rifles were .36, .38, .40 and a couple .50 & .54. The .54's were always the easiest to load & most accurate for me, and 3F was perfectly acceptable.
From what he told me, a lot of info is passed down by word of mouth & when written down, as with his documents, there were often contradictions. His take was that you use whatever works with whatever is on hand. Those written 'rules' were what worked for a particular gun owner, and may not agree with what another gun owner wrote down. Back in the day, written instructions were often regarded as gospel, but there was no accounting for discrepancies. Today this would be simply regarded as "Your Mileage May Vary".
After reading of individual members' success with "outside-the-box" loading data, I'm tending to agree with the YMMV assessment. The Powder Granulation Cop's Expert status is reduced to a whiner, annoyed that his status as an "expert" is diminished by alternative and workable loads outside his dictums. The result can be bitterness, sarcasm, and sometimes namecalling, all without supporting explainations, and none of which will restore title or position of esteemed expert.