A few more observations:
Last night I mixed up more Primall powder and loaded 100 more single layer caps that were previously punched out. The Large Rifle Primer tray is very handy to hold the cups when priming and putting a drop of liquid onto the powder. Another little tool I incorporated was a Small Rifle Primer Cup glued on to a Kabab Skewer Stick that was sanded to conform to the SRP Cup shape. This allowed the right amount of powder to fill the percussion cap and not loose powder off to the sides.
Someone had asked what ratio of Acetone and Duco to use. The first batch last week I put a couple drops of the glue into approximately a tablespoon of acetone. Those shoot just fine but they do show that the fine powder does shift out of the cups into the storage tin. I wanted to see if more glue could prevent that from happening.
This second batch I dribbled a very generous amount of Duco into the Tablespoon (+/-) of Acetone. I should have been more scientific and measured both ingredients exactly, but I'm not too prone to do that. Let's just say it was well over two full drops of Duco, more like 4 healthy drops.
A drop was administered into all 100 cups onto of the mix.
After all the primers were completed a little powder was left of the primall mix I poured the left over powder into a small ziplock bag and saturated it with the Acetone/Duco liquid. This was not just wet but excess liquid was in the small corner of the bag surrounding the wetted powder. This means that even more glue residue would be dried into this portion.
This morning I began to rethink the amount of Duco in the Acetone. What if it makes the powder too gummy, not igniting consistently due to the glue mix absorbing the hammer blow? The Acetone was evaporated from the left over powder so I took the ziplock back to the garage, inserted ear plugs and smacked it with a hammer. The first blow didn't set it off, but that was something I've already noticed with the first batch, The hit must be flush on top or it doesn't pop. The second hammer strike initiated the loudest POP yet, blew out the whole corner of the bag and a fragment of the charge hit my finger sharply.
I didn't want to need to clean a rifle, but this needed to be duplicated with an actual cap on a nipple with a normal sidelock hammer blow. The TC Renegade has not been shot for a number of years, and a good cleaning and lubing wouldn't hurt it any. Ear plugs in, cap on nipple, trigger pulled and the garage had smoke and noise.
Next test was to pour some Goex FFg in, stuff a wad of cotton on top and shoot if off in the back yard with one of these test caps. I am pleased to say that a hearty boom, smoke and cotton confetti were the satisfying results. Thankfully the amount of Duco I liberally added last night did not prevent successful ignition.
This test did not include spraying the caps with Hairspray after the mixture dried overnight. I may get around to that in the next testing, but for now I'll prepare the double layer cups that are punched out to be ready to shoot and hunt with those. I count only 39 CC1 #11's left in my kit and this is a very viable alternative.