Are you talking about buckshot?Is grease or a patch necesary when using pellet type charges in a revolver? I want to avoid any cross-fire, but don't want to use grease or a patch if I don't need to.
I know they offered pellets sized for revolvers for a while. They were pricey and I didn't see any reason to spend the money on them when loose powder worked just fine. I've tried the paper cartridge route too as well as using the little charge tubes that you put the ball in the end to retain the powder. I thought they quit making the revolver ones as I haven't seen them anywhere in years. Only see the 50 cal ones intended for those inline rifles the "modern" hunters like. If I ran across any they would have to be really cheap for me to buy them, I don't see any real advantage over the other methods I've used
Drop one in, measure the chambers from the front of the charge to the cylinder face. Measure the ball or bullet, subtract one from the other, mark the ram with the appropriate depth. Done.I had no idea, So when you lever the ball down in the cylinder how do you know that there is no "air space" or that the pellet has crushed evenly? Also, I am assuming that these "pellets" were designed for the horse pistols and such? I have never seen anything less than a 50 gr pellet is the reason I ask.
RM
I did it for triple 7 powder which apparently doesn’t like compression or air space. I’m So now chambers loaded with T7 are all uniformly seated with 1/16” compression.OK,
I guess that’s an option.
Thanks!
RM
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