Apparently you have never tried doing it. I have repeatedly ground 4f into what I would call 5f using a marble mortar and pestle it takes a bit off work to get it to 5f. I would go on to say if one lives in a very humid environment 5f may not be a very good thing. However in a normal or dry environment 5f is a very good thing.You’ll end up with bp dust. Not a good thing
I don’t need to try it …Apparently you have never tried doing it. I have repeatedly ground 4f into what I would call 5f using a marble mortar and pestle it takes a bit off work to get it to 5f. I would go on to say if one lives in a very humid environment 5f may not be a very good thing. However in a normal or dry environment 5f is a very good thing.
Doc,
I find that some of the items I build, a horn or pan primer sometimes do not like to feed the larger grains. Example is the brass spring 1 grain pan charger valve. I have tried 3f but it clogs up and gives me short pan charge. The 3gr pan charger feeds it all, no issues. Sometimes my home made horn pan charger clogs as well making me shake and pour as I prefer a smaller pour spout and plug to control flow for pan priming. The carry horns i make have a 3/8 or so and all flows well it seems if i pan charge from my carry horn.i think, and its only my thought, and i haven't had coffee yet, that most of the "obsession " stems from the misconception of shooters that their misfires, flash in the pans, and klatches are the fault of the powder size.
sharp flints, vent picking, cleaning the flint edge and frizzen, don't enter their minds ad possible problems. these are things you learn are part and parcel of the complete process of shooting flintlocks. and then there are some that just have to use two horns to validate their experience.
Brokennock, under slow-mo it’s been shown and timed, there’s a tiny bit of difference between 2, 3 and 4f on the average shot. Using 5, or 6f everything stays very much cleaner. But the real thing is for a competitive target shooter especially off hand the mental aspect comes into play. A top shooter knows when the gun is going off pulls (jerks) the trigger when the sights align. As much as we wish, off hand unfortunately the barrel does keep moving. When the competitor KNOWS ?? the shot is going off faster, whether it does or not has no bearing. He is confident, therefore more likely to hit exactly where he want’s. I unfortunately have dropped out of the top category because of age. But I admit I still use 5f. It certainly can’t hurt.Can someone please explain to me, without being a wise___, or otherwise getting emotional and defensive about it,,,,, what is this obsession people seem to have developed about grinding powder? It seems this topic comes up frequently, maybe with increasing frequency.
With a few hundred years of priming guns with whatever powder was used to charge the gun and a huge number of people replying in modern times that their 2f and 3f works just fine in the pan, I really and truly don't understand this question.
Thanks in advance for any reasonable answer.
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