I'm late to the party here but thank you for posting this info Edit: R.I.P. ! Thank you to the rest of yall for your contribution. Informitive and very interesting info.
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Interesting!There were a lot of scandals back during and after the civil war where manufacturers reduced powder charges and bullet weight to increase profits. Some of the old surviving newspaper articles and court case documents were interesting. The government specifications had listed the bullet weights and powder charges for the paper cartridges contracts and unscrupulous manufacturers tried to cheat and got caught.
Sure glad nothing like that goes on today!There were a lot of scandals back during and after the civil war where manufacturers reduced powder charges and bullet weight to increase profits. Some of the old surviving newspaper articles and court case documents were interesting. The government specifications had listed the bullet weights and powder charges for the paper cartridges contracts and unscrupulous manufacturers tried to cheat and got caught.
More 'oatmeal' . . . Than '22f'That is why the buffalo troopers got repeating guns as the ammo was more oatmeal than 22F.
Iād certainly love to see information on the paper cartridges as to the powder charges they used. Hazardās used their Pistol Powder which was 4F and potent like Swiss. 36 grns of it pushing a 211 grn bullet must have been somewhat impressive even with that stupid pointy nose. Using 4F would make some of those very anemic looking powder charges make more sense.So unless you were lucky and always issued the same brand of ammo it would have been very difficult to have any degree of real accuracy with these pistols. Going from 211g bullet to a 260g bullet depending on what was in the supply wagon would have been a real pain in the butt for any serious pistol shooter.
Hazardās used their new Pistol Powder in their paper cartridges. They were found to contain 4F powder. And itās potent like Swiss so itās likely dense and being finer could add a few grains. My 30 grn measure weighs ~32.5 grns of 3F Olde Eynsford as is also dense like Swiss weighing more than their standard Goex powder.For the Colt Navy no way 21grs of powder fit under a 141gr conical, I couldn't get 17grs to fit under 140gr conical, so I'm running 15grs. I ordered 126gr and am waiting for them to see what fits under them.
I double checked my volume weights against a grain scale and my 20gr spout is spot on and the 15gr spout throws a little under the actual weight with Swiss 3F. I wonder what the original cylinder chamber dimensions are and if it makes a difference.I think they went by actual weight not volume.
Going from 211g bullet to a 260g bullet depending on what was in the supply wagon would have been a real pain in the butt for any serious pistol shooter.
Those would look good in a cased set!Buffalos Arms happens to make combustible paper cartridges for .44 cap and ball pistols. It might be of interest to those who do not want to roll their own
https://www.buffaloarms.com/6-44-calcombustible-cartridges-cpc44.html
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