I've been lurking here for the past year and a half... and have learned some valuable information from your posts. I hope you can help me solve a small problem concerning my hunting loads.
I recently picked up a small (39-inches overall length), older, very light (6½ lbs), .50 caliber CVA percussion cap rifle in like-new condition which I intend to use as my whitetail rifle. Stamped on the the rifle's 26-inch barrel, which I assume has a 1:48 twist, is "HUNTER-HAWKEN Carbine .50 caliber".
I intend to shoot a .490" Hornady round, patched lead ball in the rifle for hunting purposes, but I'd like to develop a load using some sort of "barrier" between the FFFg Swiss Powder and the patch... and this is my question to the forum.
Short of buying a .50 caliber punch and punching out my own "wads" from possibly card stock or whatever, what could I use to insure the patch's dampness doesn't cause the black powder to become damp or wet and fail to fire? I intend to leave the rifle loaded for possibly several days at a time.
I was considering the use of a small, folded piece of waxed paper placed between the patched ball and the FFFg powder charge as the "barrier". My thinking is that the waxed paper would easily burn up in the barrel while leaving no residue when the rifle was fired and would not cause any problems, yet it would shield the patch's lubrication from causing the powder to absorb moisture from the patch.
Please give me your opinions on this combination and/or suggest a different approach to solving this problem wherein the lubricated, patched ball lays against the rifle's powder charge for what could be several days in a row before being fired.
Thank you in advance for your thoughts and/or suggestions.
Strength & Honor...
Ron T.
I recently picked up a small (39-inches overall length), older, very light (6½ lbs), .50 caliber CVA percussion cap rifle in like-new condition which I intend to use as my whitetail rifle. Stamped on the the rifle's 26-inch barrel, which I assume has a 1:48 twist, is "HUNTER-HAWKEN Carbine .50 caliber".
I intend to shoot a .490" Hornady round, patched lead ball in the rifle for hunting purposes, but I'd like to develop a load using some sort of "barrier" between the FFFg Swiss Powder and the patch... and this is my question to the forum.
Short of buying a .50 caliber punch and punching out my own "wads" from possibly card stock or whatever, what could I use to insure the patch's dampness doesn't cause the black powder to become damp or wet and fail to fire? I intend to leave the rifle loaded for possibly several days at a time.
I was considering the use of a small, folded piece of waxed paper placed between the patched ball and the FFFg powder charge as the "barrier". My thinking is that the waxed paper would easily burn up in the barrel while leaving no residue when the rifle was fired and would not cause any problems, yet it would shield the patch's lubrication from causing the powder to absorb moisture from the patch.
Please give me your opinions on this combination and/or suggest a different approach to solving this problem wherein the lubricated, patched ball lays against the rifle's powder charge for what could be several days in a row before being fired.
Thank you in advance for your thoughts and/or suggestions.
Strength & Honor...
Ron T.