Black Jaque Janaviac
40 Cal.
- Joined
- Sep 2, 2009
- Messages
- 535
- Reaction score
- 73
Does anyone shoot paper cartridges?
My son doesn't care to hunt carrying a powder horn around. So last year we just made up a bunch of premeasured "speedloaders" basically a paper cartridge without the projectile. We tried shooting a paper patched ball in it but it wasn't accurate.
This year he has a different gun. I would like to work up a load that works with the paper-wrapped ball. However, I noticed that if I construct the paper cartridge such that my son could bite off the end, dump the powder down, then ram the whole kit-n-caboodle down on top of the powder it doesn't make for a sturdy cartridge.
I use a parallelogram template. When I get finished making the cartridge I usually would tuck the folded end under the edge of the paper. This holds things really snug. However when I include the bullet, I have to wrap in the direction according to the rifling. This leaves the edge of the paper at and angle facing away from the folded tab so the tab cannot be easily tucked in.
I was just wondering if anyone shoots paper cartriges and how you make them. Can they be made as simple as: bite off the end, dump down powder, ram the rest down, cap, and fire?
My son doesn't care to hunt carrying a powder horn around. So last year we just made up a bunch of premeasured "speedloaders" basically a paper cartridge without the projectile. We tried shooting a paper patched ball in it but it wasn't accurate.
This year he has a different gun. I would like to work up a load that works with the paper-wrapped ball. However, I noticed that if I construct the paper cartridge such that my son could bite off the end, dump the powder down, then ram the whole kit-n-caboodle down on top of the powder it doesn't make for a sturdy cartridge.
I use a parallelogram template. When I get finished making the cartridge I usually would tuck the folded end under the edge of the paper. This holds things really snug. However when I include the bullet, I have to wrap in the direction according to the rifling. This leaves the edge of the paper at and angle facing away from the folded tab so the tab cannot be easily tucked in.
I was just wondering if anyone shoots paper cartriges and how you make them. Can they be made as simple as: bite off the end, dump down powder, ram the rest down, cap, and fire?