Millermpls
40 Cal.
- Joined
- Jan 1, 2014
- Messages
- 128
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Had a Remington reproduction fire the lower chamber when I touched off a shot. It plowed into the rammer, deforming sufficiently that the cylinder had clearance to keep turning. In fact, I didn't even notice until I unexpectedly didn't hear a 'bang' when i got to the empty chamber. I used 25 grains FFFG, will 8 grains cream of wheat, a lubed patch, .454 ball, topped with bore butter.
This is a brass framed 70s vintage 1858 that I picked up for cheap. This happened on my second cylinder, and I discontinued until I could examine at home. It seems to be OK, but I am new to BP.
Questions:
Did I just turn this into a wall hanger, or is the lead ball so soft that real damage isn't likely in a chain fire?
With the load described, it seems unlikely that this ignited from the front of the chamber (seating the balls was a bear, enough that I think this revolver might want .451 size balls). Is it common that spark enters through a nipple covered with a cap? Is there technique to avoid this?
Thanks in advance for your thoughts.
This is a brass framed 70s vintage 1858 that I picked up for cheap. This happened on my second cylinder, and I discontinued until I could examine at home. It seems to be OK, but I am new to BP.
Questions:
Did I just turn this into a wall hanger, or is the lead ball so soft that real damage isn't likely in a chain fire?
With the load described, it seems unlikely that this ignited from the front of the chamber (seating the balls was a bear, enough that I think this revolver might want .451 size balls). Is it common that spark enters through a nipple covered with a cap? Is there technique to avoid this?
Thanks in advance for your thoughts.