I agree with Dan. The whole point of shooting small bore rifles is to save costs. If you are putting 35-40 grains of powder in a gun when 15 or 20 grains is more than adequate, what have you accomplished?? Other than to waste money???
I can assure you that our ancestors could not afford to waste money on powder or ball, or caps. My grandfather was raised on a poor fruit farm near Coloma, Michigan, where the family lived on what his older brothers and father could TRAP with snares, and, in good years, shoot with small caliber rifles, IF THEY COULD AFFORD THE POWDER or Cartridges. The Rest of the winter, they ate potatoes, from a 100 lb. sack HIS father bartered for in exchange for a couple of bushels of apples from the farm, and then whatever food was canned over the summer and fall from their "vegetable Garden". They picked up culls of apples from the ground- that could not be sold-- and ate them through the winter and Spring months.
He grew up running a trap line, at which he was no good( he said), and ran off to the big city to find work as soon as he could. He was a Teamster- driving a horse drawn wagon-- when he first met my Grandmother in a boarding house. Before they married, he got a job as a " Fireman" on the Milwaukee Railroad, when engines still used wood and coal to create steam, and later was promoted to being an Engineer. I have a shotgun he bought later in life, so that he could return home to go hunting with his brothers, and cousins.
If you shoot Traditional ML rifles because you want to understand and experience hunting as our ancestors did, consider using less powder, casting your own balls, and choosing those shots wisely. Few of us do subsistence hunting and fishing these days, but you can imitate that way of living by using LESS. :thumbsup: