• Friends, our 2nd Amendment rights are always under attack and the NRA has been a constant for decades in helping fight that fight.

    We have partnered with the NRA to offer you a discount on membership and Muzzleloading Forum gets a small percentage too of each membership, so you are supporting both the NRA and us.

    Use this link to sign up please; https://membership.nra.org/recruiters/join/XR045103

Anyone use 1.5F in their bigger bore flintlock rifles?

Muzzleloading Forum

Help Support Muzzleloading Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
I found this chart showing the granulation size for Swiss powder online.

Type   Granulation  Use
1Fg   1.2-1.6 mm   Cannons, shotguns and muskets
1.5Fg .85-1.2 mm   45 Caliber rifles and bigger
2Fg   .65-1.2 mm   45 Caliber rifles and bigger
3Fg   .50-.8mm   45 caliber rifles and smaller, pistols
4Fg   .19-.23 mm   Flintlock priming powder only
 
I use it in 38 LB. 75, CAL FLINTLOCK RIFFELED WALL GUN, and it is no different than #1FG.
 
I came into some 1.5FFg black powder. I figured I can use it for plinking and casual shooting of my .54 rifle and .620 Barn fowler. Anyone have experience with it?
I've used it in a .58 flinter and couldn't really tell any difference! A bit dirtier, perhaps.
 
Both I’ve used Swiss in my Colts and then in the flintlocks. The old ensford is $10.00 cheaper and I’m not that good to notice a difference in the big bores. The Swiss 2 f and 3f run cleaner unless I am imagining it both 1 and 1.5 both dirty the smooth bores up pretty well imo. The Swiss is very expensive forget buying from totw they are very expensive.
 
I found this chart showing the granulation size for Swiss powder online.

Type   Granulation  Use
1Fg   1.2-1.6 mm   Cannons, shotguns and muskets
1.5Fg .85-1.2 mm   45 Caliber rifles and bigger
2Fg   .65-1.2 mm   45 Caliber rifles and bigger
3Fg   .50-.8mm   45 caliber rifles and smaller, pistols
4Fg   .19-.23 mm   Flintlock priming powder only
Thanks for this! I shoot .50 cal rifles and just ordered some 1.5F (usually use 2F)
 
Yes


0.jpg
 
Olde Eynsford 1 1/2 F is my favorite powder. In my 32" .54 Bridger Hawken copy, 13 shots of 100 grains by weight averaged 1817 fps with 44 fps spread. 100 grains of Swiss 1 1/2F BY WEIGHT averaged 1724 fps with 120 fps spread. If you shoot more than 100 grains of Swiss 1 1/2F, it leaves a glassy deposit in the bore that must be cleaned out, at least in .54 and .58 rifles to my personal experimenting. I don't know about 62 caliber. I like OE 1 1/2F much better than Swiss 1 1/2F, but the Swiss will work well in .54 caliber rifles and larger with charges up to 100 grains.
 
Used 1.5 Swiss years ago in my Whitworth and Volunteer. Both .451. Worked great. No ignition problems with either CCI or RWS musket caps. Damn, I miss those rifles.
 
Thanks fellas so much, I have a supply of Swiss 1-1/2 I will try soon. I have it from my BPCR days.
 
I finally tried Swiss 1.5F in my Kibler Colonial 58 today, with 4F swiss in the pan. My consensus is as long as you have a quality lock, you should not see or feel a difference in lock up time. The rifle went bang just as fast as it does with 3F or 2F. The accuracy was not on par, but I did not work up a load either. I loaded the same 80gr by volume as I do with my Olde Eynsford 2F. I imagine with proper load work up the 1.5F would outperform the Olde E in this gun.

Buy without hesitation.
 
Back
Top