- Joined
- Jul 24, 2018
- Messages
- 4,497
- Reaction score
- 5,647
Ok, today I hot dipped 24 of the North Carolina Nessler balls in SPG blackpowder lube, and pushed them through my .680 sizer with a wooden dowel just to get the excess lube off them.
I rolled them into 1863 pattern paper cartridges, with 70 gr of Old Eynsford 2f. I figured if 70 gr of 2f was nearly the same as the Ordnance loading for the .69 Minie, it should be fine for a .69 Nessler. It's probably what the charge they used in the 1860s.
I used what seems like a light brown paper bag paper, I don't know I dug these out from a Jefferson Arsenal. 69 Minie kit. They are just thick enough to be easy to work with. Masking paper worked horribly, too thin and since the Nessler has a solid base , there is no Minie "cavity" for the pig tail of the 2nd tube to go into.
I also tried these cheesy Revolutionary War reenactor blank papers with newspaper print on them, they're made from the same paper as sticky notes and don't work well. I got them cheap off Ebay , they work great for blanks but that's it. They look cool in a cartridge box otherwise but not made for live rounds.
My Revolutionary era repro 24-Hole cartridge box, filled with Nessler cartridges. Hopefully these actually do something good out of my 1816 Springfield repro.
I plan to just load them like a Minie, at .680 they should bump up. I get usable accuracy "bare balling" with .648 balls with wadding on top.
I'm hesitant to use "wadding" on top of a bullet, given the tighter constriction it may become an obstruction. A loose round ball has a little more give to it than a .680 bullet in a fouled bore.
Given that pulled Nesslers have been found in encampment sites, presumably from being pulled after sentry duty, I imagine that the Nesslers were simply loaded normally.
A few firm thumps from the rod may bump the base out a little.
We'll see how these do, I'm also bringing some round balls in case these shoot terribly , so I don't waste a range trip.