magnum percussion caps

Muzzleloading Forum

Help Support Muzzleloading Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
Joined
Jan 30, 2021
Messages
1,045
Reaction score
1,118
Under which circumstances, if ever, are magnum percussion caps called for and appropriate to use when firing black powder cap-and-ball revolvers?
 
I had one pistol designed for the hammer to strike the frame before it hit the nipple to allow for dry firing. There were some standard caps (CCI #11) that would not fire. The extra priming compound in the magnum caps raised the top of the ca enough for the hammer to strike the cap and fire. I have had some production revolvers that used #10 nipples that were a bit too short in the cone. They wouldn't reliably fire either and there is no such thing as a #10 magnum cap. There the choice was to buy new #11 sized nipples.

It is also appropriate to use magnum caps when firing a substitute black powder as you need a little hotter flame to ignite the substitute powers.
 
IMO, the Magnum caps were made for the people who are using one of the synthetic black powders. These powders need a higher temperature to ignite.

With a revolver, the nipple directs the flame directly into the powder so most of the synthetic powders work just as good with regular caps.
In the case of a rifle, especially the ones that have a bolster mounted nipple, the long flame channel from the cap to the powder cools the cap's flame so these Magnum caps can make a difference in the rifles reliability. I might add that the German Dynimite Nobel caps (RWS) are just as hot as the Magnum caps and work well with most synthetic powders in a rifle.
 
The CCI Magnum #11 caps are designed for single shot percussion arms.

When used in cap and ball revolvers they will split and fragment causing malfunctions.
 
Back
Top