I use a 4/5 beeswax lard mixture.
Once or twice until the Crisco melted, made a big mess.
Actually, if you use the proper size round ball in your revolver, you don't need Crisco or anything else over the chamber mouth. You're shaving a 0.001 to 0.002 ring off the ball when you load it.
No sparks or flame is getting past the ball. Not when the clearance of the ball to chamber wall is absolute zero.
I use a 4/5 beeswax lard mixture.
In all my years of competing, I've never seen nor had a multiple discharge with C&B revolver (well, single shot neither!). As an engineer, I've considered all the folk-lore around this reported phenomenon. To my mind, such seems impossible at the front of properly loaded cylinders. Properly meaning oversize ball that shaves a ring when rammed in.
Some have postulated that it's far more likely to occur at the rear. Loose caps, being a very likely issue.
Sadly, I've never seen any testing done to actually nail this down. I do use lube, but to help improve accuracy. I've seen most of any lube thusly applied blown away with the first shot fired. Poor choice to my mind. Wonderwads seem by far the best approach.
Let's hear some personal experiences, observations, test results, and conclusions that can pass the BS test.
There are better products for this. I would use lard over Crisco. Or mix REFINED beeswax with Neatsfoot oil to form a grease like lube 1:2 or 3 BWil by weight. This works a lot better than almost any store bought lube.i am new to muzzle loading. I have a .50 cal Kentucky rifle by Traditions. I am using .490 ball and pillow ticking (.015) patch. I was wondering about lubing the patch with crisco. Is that an issue?
Thanks
Jeremy Bays
I have been present for a few chain firings, and had at least one myself. In my case, I found an unfired cap on the bench, so I'm pretty sure that the second cylinder was lit up from behind. In at least one of the other cases, the person was told by the range officer (who obviously didn't know s** about c&b revolvers) to only cap the cylinder he was going to fire. What he didn't say was to only load one at a time if doing so. Usually, the person doing the shooting doesn't even know that it happened; the normal recoil covers up the minimal recoil from the extra balls escaping. The shooter finds out when he goes to shoot the next round. Bystanders can sometimes hear a sort of 'RRIP' sound instead of the usual 'Bang'' but often that is not even noticed. The pistols are designed to allow every ball to get clear without damaging the guns, so I guess the old timers were quite familiar with the phenomenon. I grease every second cylinder with a bit of Crisco, just to keep fouling a bit softer, and perhaps prevent a bit of leading, and I press my caps down very firmly.In all my years of competing, I've never seen nor had a multiple discharge with C&B revolver (well, single shot neither!). As an engineer, I've considered all the folk-lore around this reported phenomenon. To my mind, such seems impossible at the front of properly loaded cylinders. Properly meaning oversize ball that shaves a ring when rammed in.
Some have postulated that it's far more likely to occur at the rear. Loose caps, being a very likely issue.
Sadly, I've never seen any testing done to actually nail this down. I do use lube, but to help improve accuracy. I've seen most of any lube thusly applied blown away with the first shot fired. Poor choice to my mind. Wonderwads seem by far the best approach.
Let's hear some personal experiences, observations, test results, and conclusions that can pass the BS test.
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