This is more informative than any questions really, but maybe it will save someone else some grief too. Sorry this is such a long read, but I wanted to paint the whole picture.
This is concerning a .54 Renegade, 70grns of Goex ff, a .530 RB, and .015" dry patches.
I recently have been struggling with burnt patches. It seemed to start when I started experimenting with different patch lubes. I was looking for the best of both worlds, a patch lube that I could use for hunting and the Muzzleloader club shoots I attend. I was hoping for a lube that would be fine if left in the barrel all day hunting (no drying out, fouling powder, or causing rust), but also one for the club shoots that would allow shooting in the neighborhood of 10 times before swabbing was needed. I don't mind using two different ones, I just thought it would be nice if there was one that would actually work for both. I tried lubing some patches with a 6:1 ratio of DA/CO first. Nope, patches were burning up and I did play around with some different ratios. So then just for kicks I tried lubing some patches with NL1000. Nope, they were burning too. Weird one there, because I can buy the pre-lubed ones from the store and they look fine, I just have to swab every shot. No problem, I'll just return to using T/C #13 as my patch lube for the club shoots, which worked before...except I found that I was now burning patches with it too.
Hmm, what is going on? I tend to assume the worst at first, so I started worrying that my cleaning procedure wasn't good and I had damaged the barrel somehow. A bore light showed that it still looked nice and shiny.
Then I thought that maybe the weather played into it more than I realized, and that when I first checked groups and patches when trying the #13 as a lube I had gotten lucky and that this combo wasn't all that good in the first place. So then I decided to try to find a tighter weaved patch to try, like pillow ticking. I happened to find that CVA makes a precut pillow ticking patch that is .015". Perfect I think, so I order them. Well, they show up and are noticeably thicker feeling (I don't have calipers at home...) than my cotton patches that are marked .015". I try them anyway with some #13 for lube and find that they are impossible to seat after the bore has been fouled with the first shot, even when I swab the barrel. This results in my first experience of using a ball puller, as it got stuck just past the depth of the short starter...boy they sure are fun to use aren't they? lol
I finally take some of the CVA pillow ticking patches and some of the cotton patches to work and measure them with calipers. The marked as .015 pillow ticking patches are measuring .0175 consistantly, and the cotton marked as .015 patches measure .011 consistantly.
After thinking about it I realized that I had used up my bag of .015 patches I'd bought at a local store and gotten into a bag of patches I'd bought from TOW right around the time I started experimenting with different lubes. I think the first bag must've been closer to the promised .015" that they are supposed to be. This now means that tests of other lubes wasn't with the thickness of patch I thought I had and can now be done over again, maybe the DA/CO will work...?
Anyway, I just wanted to share this experience. I learned that the simple use of some calipers on any newly purchased patches is a real good idea. I never was very good at reliably following the K.I.S.S. method, lol.
This is concerning a .54 Renegade, 70grns of Goex ff, a .530 RB, and .015" dry patches.
I recently have been struggling with burnt patches. It seemed to start when I started experimenting with different patch lubes. I was looking for the best of both worlds, a patch lube that I could use for hunting and the Muzzleloader club shoots I attend. I was hoping for a lube that would be fine if left in the barrel all day hunting (no drying out, fouling powder, or causing rust), but also one for the club shoots that would allow shooting in the neighborhood of 10 times before swabbing was needed. I don't mind using two different ones, I just thought it would be nice if there was one that would actually work for both. I tried lubing some patches with a 6:1 ratio of DA/CO first. Nope, patches were burning up and I did play around with some different ratios. So then just for kicks I tried lubing some patches with NL1000. Nope, they were burning too. Weird one there, because I can buy the pre-lubed ones from the store and they look fine, I just have to swab every shot. No problem, I'll just return to using T/C #13 as my patch lube for the club shoots, which worked before...except I found that I was now burning patches with it too.
Hmm, what is going on? I tend to assume the worst at first, so I started worrying that my cleaning procedure wasn't good and I had damaged the barrel somehow. A bore light showed that it still looked nice and shiny.
Then I thought that maybe the weather played into it more than I realized, and that when I first checked groups and patches when trying the #13 as a lube I had gotten lucky and that this combo wasn't all that good in the first place. So then I decided to try to find a tighter weaved patch to try, like pillow ticking. I happened to find that CVA makes a precut pillow ticking patch that is .015". Perfect I think, so I order them. Well, they show up and are noticeably thicker feeling (I don't have calipers at home...) than my cotton patches that are marked .015". I try them anyway with some #13 for lube and find that they are impossible to seat after the bore has been fouled with the first shot, even when I swab the barrel. This results in my first experience of using a ball puller, as it got stuck just past the depth of the short starter...boy they sure are fun to use aren't they? lol
I finally take some of the CVA pillow ticking patches and some of the cotton patches to work and measure them with calipers. The marked as .015 pillow ticking patches are measuring .0175 consistantly, and the cotton marked as .015 patches measure .011 consistantly.
After thinking about it I realized that I had used up my bag of .015 patches I'd bought at a local store and gotten into a bag of patches I'd bought from TOW right around the time I started experimenting with different lubes. I think the first bag must've been closer to the promised .015" that they are supposed to be. This now means that tests of other lubes wasn't with the thickness of patch I thought I had and can now be done over again, maybe the DA/CO will work...?
Anyway, I just wanted to share this experience. I learned that the simple use of some calipers on any newly purchased patches is a real good idea. I never was very good at reliably following the K.I.S.S. method, lol.