Given that experience is knowing when you make the same mistake AGAIN, I prefer not to pee on an electric fence (Paul, I love that line, I hope you don't mind if I use it some).
Okay, sorry to stir up such a hornet's nest, but thank you to everyone who has answered. I'm learning a lot about this new "addiction" of mine (muzzleloading), and I can really use the feedback. The reason I asked the question, and engaged in "pile driving" is: first, the one shot I fired out of a muzzleloader at scout camp, I was taught to load that way (not to mention, to "throw" the ramrod down the barrel to move the ball down the barrel; this may be due to a decrease in risk, meaning your hand is not in front of the barrel if the charge goes off). That was also my first muzzleloading experience. Second, air is compressible, solids and liquids are not. If the ball is not firmly on the powder charge, the air under the ball will compress, absorbing the shock of the ramrod hitting the ball, hence no bounce. Once the ball is on the powder firmly, there is no air to compress and absorbe the shock of the ramrod, and therefor, the rod bounces. Third, you all have way more experience than I do, so, ask the people who know.
I have marked my ramrod (with a sharpie) to know where the current target load is, so technically, once the mark meets the muzzle, the load is ready, and I should no longer need to bounce the rod to figure out if the load is properly seated. But (the word in the sentance that negates everything in front of it), that brings up another question.
I have a TC New Englander in .50 caliber, as well as the TC ball starter as an accessory. The stub and the short starter, although listed as .50 caliber accessories, do leave some ring like marks on the ball as it is seated. Since these should all match the ball, does this mean something else is amiss?
Also, back to the evil bouncing question, assuming the ball is seated on the powder correctly, does bouncing the ramrod cause the ball to expand in the barrel? If this did occur, and happened unevenly, that would definitely throw off someone's accuracy. If I had an air discharger, I could test this, but using a screw to pull out the ball run down the barrel would ruin any chance of measuring to see if the ball changed dimentions.
Thanks again, one and all.
D