I got the idea from looking at all the cushion wads that are used to fill up brass casings for those old nitro cartridges, so that smokeless powders made today can be used in the old guns.And, if you have ever cut open a commercially made shotgun slug, you will find losts of wads behind the slug. The Brenneke even uses a screw to hold the wads to the base of the slug, so that the slug and the wads travel down range to the target.
A ML shotgun, or fowler, because the chamber is not a separate part of the gun in these large gauge barrels, is not like the cartridge rifle or shotgun. There is no need for a tapered throat in front of the chamber to ease the slug and wads into the bore.
But, when an expansion chamber is ground or cut into the barrel to provide choke, you have a " Chamber " . Now, that chamber needs a throat, and because you are shooting a PRB, you need some way for the PRB to get through the chamber area without losing the patch, or subjecting the ball to gas cutting.
Basically, the idea is to use several cushion wads- the fat ones that are about 1/2" thick, made of celotex-- to bridge the expansion chamber, so that by the time that gas is able to enter the slope into the expansion chamber, the ball or slug is already past the chamber and into the last remaining portion of the barrel just before the muzzle. What gases do get into the chamber burn or affect only some of the cushion wads BEHIND the ball, or bullet, and do not cut the Patch or ball, or bullet in front of the cushion wads.
The cushion wads would add to the total mass being pushed by the powder, and contribute half their weight to the felt recoil, but I would not expect that small increase to make the recoil intolerable.
Again, depending on the amount of choke( the diameter of the expansion chamber) the length of the chamber, and the total length of the bevel into the chamber and the throat out of it, will determine how much and what kind of wads you will need to bridge the chamber as described.
There is also the problem of barrel harmonica being altered by jug choking, and you may have to work up an entirely new load for a PRB, to get the same kind of accuracy you had before the jug choking.
Frankly, I prefer what ROUNDBALL did last year. He ordered both a barrel that he jug choked, and then a second barrel that is rifled to fire PRB. He is not trying to do all things with the same barrel.
Of the problems I have mentioned, the bridging is the easiest to solve. The Barrel harmonics is the one that will give anyone real headaches,IMHO. A barrel that shot very good groups before it was jug choked, may never fire comparable groups again, simply because the barrel harmonics are dramatically change, particularly in that last inch before the muzzle.
Paul