Didn't read all posts so forgive me if I repeat someone here. I have found that when I prime the pan I use " just enough". Seems to work well for me. It's kinda like when my mom cooked. No recipe just went by eye and feel. Worked for her.
MSW said:excess650 said:Short of inline, the ignition channel for percussion guns (drum & nipple and patent breech) is longer than that of a proper flintlock. I prefer flint!
I prefer flint, too.
but I prefer flint because flint is magical. flint makes you cooler, more suave, more debonair, more sophisticated, better looking, socially adept and sexually attractive. shooting a flint improves you grammar, advances your standing in the community, restores lost vigor, health and radiance, and removes unwanted wrinkles.
:rotf: not
But most trad. cap guns use the nipple-drum-barrel hole path. Even with the nipple screwed directly into barrel, you still have the barrel thickness, which is considerable.M.D. said:Only true in a patent breech system. An underhammer or mules ear lock has the nipple threaded directly into the charge the barrel thickness away.
In this configuration the prime is actually as close or closer than a flinter pan prime.
My match rifle is an underhammer .45 caliber and it probably comes pretty close to a metallic cartridge for ignition speed.
I don't even remember it failing to fire unless I dry ball.
Ridge said:I have several styles of locks and my procedure for all of them is half a pan of priming powder.
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