I tested this out years ago so I'm working from memory. I made small wood boxes that the combustible cartridges were encased. These were about the size of a deck of cards. I made both the mono-bloc DC Sage style and the two piece Colt style. I liked the Colt best. These wood "packets" had a pull string/wire.
The halves were held together by paper wrapping. When you pulled the string/wire it ripped the paper wrapping and exposed the carridges. Sage had an additional hole for the caps.
If I recall it took about 45 seconds to ram 6 rounds and cap 6 nipples. I then compared with my Colt SAA 45 Colt "Peacemaker". You have to unload the spent/fired/old rounds and then load the new rounds and I think that took about 25 seconds. In any event the two were pretty close.
NOTE: don't fire a cylinder and then try to reload fast as any ember in the chamber could cause the new round to explode. Start with an inspected cylinder.
The other thing, the cartridge guns ended up being one only but the percussion were very often carried in pairs. The 44 Colts are actually pretty powerful and 12 rounds. With two, you can (if hiding behind a rock, etc. reload one revolver while the other is instantly available. Buffalo Bill wrote when he was young of holding off a large band of NDNs, doing just that, having the ability of a constant fire.
The halves were held together by paper wrapping. When you pulled the string/wire it ripped the paper wrapping and exposed the carridges. Sage had an additional hole for the caps.
If I recall it took about 45 seconds to ram 6 rounds and cap 6 nipples. I then compared with my Colt SAA 45 Colt "Peacemaker". You have to unload the spent/fired/old rounds and then load the new rounds and I think that took about 25 seconds. In any event the two were pretty close.
NOTE: don't fire a cylinder and then try to reload fast as any ember in the chamber could cause the new round to explode. Start with an inspected cylinder.
The other thing, the cartridge guns ended up being one only but the percussion were very often carried in pairs. The 44 Colts are actually pretty powerful and 12 rounds. With two, you can (if hiding behind a rock, etc. reload one revolver while the other is instantly available. Buffalo Bill wrote when he was young of holding off a large band of NDNs, doing just that, having the ability of a constant fire.