Yea, you have to work up a load. One thing that does seem to help accuracy is uniform pressure on the loading lever when seating the ball.
Zonie said:Well, I'm not Rebel, but your right.
Each pistol will have a load it likes better than the other loads.
For the life of me, I can't figure out why everybody keeps wanting to load these black powder pistols (and rifles) up to some kind of maximum load.
They work just fine with a chamber filled to about 1/4-5/16 from the mouth of the chamber before the ball is rammed down tight so, try several different loads and see what happens.
zonie
mykeal said:...I suppose you could start with the max load and work your way down, I've just never considered doing it that way. Why beat yourself and the gun up with something that produces sub-optimum results?
rebel727 said:Zonie said:Well, I'm not Rebel, but your right.
Each pistol will have a load it likes better than the other loads.
For the life of me, I can't figure out why everybody keeps wanting to load these black powder pistols (and rifles) up to some kind of maximum load.
They work just fine with a chamber filled to about 1/4-5/16 from the mouth of the chamber before the ball is rammed down tight so, try several different loads and see what happens.
zonie
I like the recoil and the bang. Mine don't really seem to have a preference for one load over another but then I'm not going to shoot a load less than 35 grs. out of a .44. Anything less has no recoil and sounds like a firecracker in a water pipe.
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