I shoot a T/C Hawken caplock, and I use it for hunting in the North Georgia Mountains. I clean my rifle using hot tap water with a little dish soap. I remove the barrel from the stock and place the breech in a pan of hot tap water with a few drops of soap, I wet my patch in the water and then swap the barrel until I pull water to the muzzle, I then let it sit for a few minutes. I finish swabbing the barrel in he water, then I change over to fresh clean water with no soap and rinse the barrel using a fresh clean patch and fresh hot water. I take the barrel back to my gun room and swab with clean patches until dry, then I take the cleaning jag of my cleaning rod and install a patch worm. I take a clean dry patch and fold it up and place in the muzzle, then push it to the breech face with the rod and twist it around a few times. I then replace the worm with the cleaning jag, and oil with rem oil. I then store my muzzleloader muzzle down in my gun safe. When I am ready to shoot or hunt, I swab with a patch wet with alchohol, then dry patch. I load the rifle without poping caps or putting powder under the nipple. I have left my rifle loaded for a month with time spent in the woods, in my truck, and in my house, The rifle fires the first time the trigger is pulled.
When I first got my rifle I had trouble with the caps going off but not the main charge. I discovered that after I cap the nipple if I lower the hammer down very gently on the cap, and press on the hammer with my thumb the nipple will expand a little and fully seat on the nipple. Sinse i have been doing my cleaning method and capping method, the only time I have had a cap go off without setting off the main charge, was at the range after about 20 shots without swabbing.