robinsroost
50 Cal.
I would love to try bacon fryings for patch lube. Even if it isn't the best choice for a lube, it would sure drive everyone else on the :stir: firing line crazy, LOL.......Robin
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Ghettogun said:read the ingredients which included hydrogenated lard and stabilizers. I imagine that is to increase the shelf life without separation.
Commercially available lard has preservatives in it. It's sold on the shelf unrefrigerated, with no expiration date. I buy it a pint at a time, keep several ounces in the refrigerator and store the rest in the freezer, probably because I'm one of those guys who has a hang up about being careful. The freezing is probably not necessary.Doesn't lard get rancid?
What's the name of that lanolin in a tube? What else is it made of besides lanolin?
Your mentioning of the pills just inspired me to look them up. I think I'll be making some of those, too. I've been putting cork disks over the powder and smearing lube around the chamber mouths before seating balls. It works, as evidenced by 48-round range sessions, but it takes a good bit of time to load that way, and the soft lube requires the disks to protect the powder from contamination.I use lard/beeswax 'pills' in my cap & ball revolvers as a lube. I also use it to lube the grooves in conical bullets.
Like bore butter?Just about the awfulest, dirtiest stuff ever. Too soft in warm weather, too hard in cold. I have tried more lubes than I can count. Chicken fat is probably the worst, in my experience. Stick with the more traditional lubes.
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