The reason that Ballistol is used in a 4:1` or 5:1 mix with water is so that the solution is evenly but THINLY distributed over patching material, when dried. Then it does not spoil your powder, but works under heat to lube the barrel, clean the crud when seating the ball, and help keep the patching from burning. If you used straight Ballistol, it would be too much oil, and like vegetable oil, or MINERAL OIL, it would bleed all over the place.
The men who mix ballistol with beeswax to make a soft lube change the percentage of each based on the temperature in which it will be used. In the Winter, you want it more oil than wax: in the summer, more wax than oil. The nice part about home brewed lubes is that you can marry them to your particular hunting conditions, and it doesn't take much work during an evening when you are watching TV to brew up a new batch. I know men who brew up thin and thick and put them in large canning, or mayonaise jars, for storage, and have their lubes for years of use. Their only problem is forgetting where they put the formula they used!
You don't have to buy a fancy double boiler at the Gourmet Cooking stores. Just put a frying pan with an inch of water in it on the stove to boil, and then put your wax, and oil mix in some kind of container that will sit inside the frying pan. The water will keep a temperature in the smaller pan from rising to the flash point of the oil and wax, while allowing them to be heated enough to blend together. Even this idiot can do this! :blah: :surrender: :rotf: