No,I own a set of digital calipers, but I figured thin cloth would be hard to measure accurately. I guess if one measures it with calipers you would let your calipers squeeze it hard,or am wrong? I use my calipers for reloading, and they function plenty well enough for the task ,but they probably are not idea for measuring material thickness.
I have a little ticking material that has red, white, blue and black stripes; it shoots wherever it wants too.Be very careful about the color. Blue always shoots to the left and red always shoots to the right.
Why wash it? I use it straight without washing and don’t have any issues?
OK, I'm going to show my "geezerness" here. Pillow ticking was made purposely with a very high thread count. The reason was to prevent pin feathers from working through the pillow and poking you in the face. It was typically white with blue stripes. After washing the sizing out of a piece of cotton material hold it up to the sky and see how many pinholes you can see through it. The high thread count will show very few holes. The bad stuff that has come on the market for some time is a thinner material with a lower thread count. Looking through it is like looking through a sieve. Do this with any thickness material you use to be sure it has a high thread count. How I miss Indian Head Cotton. It was a thin material (flour sacks) that was great for shallow groove rifling.
Everybody has a preference. I determine the optimal patch thickness by ease of loading and accuracy. I also make my patch lube. Been shooting bp since the 70's. Never owned a caliper to measure patch thickness. From a bench I can get 5 shots touching in the center of the target at 50 yards. That's accurate enough for me. This is a simple sport.
Thanks for all the advice everyone. I bought some a Walmart yesterday. I have been going there for years,and had no Idea they sold it ,and I was surprised how cheap. I didn't have calipers, but I bought a piece of the blueish gray stripe,and a piece of the red stripe in case they measured different. I bought 8 inches of each,and figure that will be enough for around 400 patches. I measured them when I got home,and they measured the same.I doubled it and held pressure on the thumb wheel of my calipers, and slowly let up on the wheel till the material would slide through while pulling it.I came up with .029.5" for each piece.The small strip of it that I got with the gun measured .028.7" ,so it is all pretty close. I only measured each piece once, because with the variables in thumb pressure, and effort in pulling the material through the caliper jaws I know that I could get slightly different readings,and I figured I am close enough with the first measurement.
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