Oxyoke advertises that their prelubed 'Wonderwads' have a number of benefits...one of which is to provide a velocity increase with the same powder charge based upon the wad sealing more gas pressure behind it, thereby reducing the amount of pressure loss through blowby.
With the wad minimizing pressure loss and variations there is also a more stable shot-to-shot pressure consistency, therefore velocity, and shot-to-shot consistency results in improved accuracy / smaller group sizes.
As I have come to understand it, a patch by itself is really not a good gasket...no doubt the patch material in the grooves helps hold back / prevents some blowby but can't possibly make a perfect seal against 8000-9000 psi hot gas pressure flowing around a ball through the grooves, patricularly when the folds of material are facing forward in the same direction that the gas pressure is trying to escape.
An excellent example of that is the slow motion video that circulates around every so often making that very point...shows that a patched ball coming out the muzzle of a rifle is preceeded by several inches of smoke and flame before the ball even exits and comes into view, and I assume that's the same rationale Oxyoke wad advertisements are based on.
I'm lucky to be the proud owner of a new chronograph and after hunting season I'll be recording the velocity of my own specific loads in different calibers...and while I'm at it, it'll be easy to do some checks with & without wads as well.
But until then, help me predict what I'll see when I shoot two series of shots with the same powder charge...one series with an overpowder wad, one series without an overpowder wad.
Will there be a difference in velocity?
If so, which series of shots will have a higher velocity?
Hope to have actual test results in a couple months.
With the wad minimizing pressure loss and variations there is also a more stable shot-to-shot pressure consistency, therefore velocity, and shot-to-shot consistency results in improved accuracy / smaller group sizes.
As I have come to understand it, a patch by itself is really not a good gasket...no doubt the patch material in the grooves helps hold back / prevents some blowby but can't possibly make a perfect seal against 8000-9000 psi hot gas pressure flowing around a ball through the grooves, patricularly when the folds of material are facing forward in the same direction that the gas pressure is trying to escape.
An excellent example of that is the slow motion video that circulates around every so often making that very point...shows that a patched ball coming out the muzzle of a rifle is preceeded by several inches of smoke and flame before the ball even exits and comes into view, and I assume that's the same rationale Oxyoke wad advertisements are based on.
I'm lucky to be the proud owner of a new chronograph and after hunting season I'll be recording the velocity of my own specific loads in different calibers...and while I'm at it, it'll be easy to do some checks with & without wads as well.
But until then, help me predict what I'll see when I shoot two series of shots with the same powder charge...one series with an overpowder wad, one series without an overpowder wad.
Will there be a difference in velocity?
If so, which series of shots will have a higher velocity?
Hope to have actual test results in a couple months.