Oh no it wasn’t. There were just many grades of woolens. Some rather coarse and scratchy, some nearly as fine as silk.Google AI.
But allot of searches lead here to old topics you find info..
I wonder.. the wool back then was much softer. Must have not been like today's woolen.
Wool works because it’s usually a bit thicker when woven, especially blankets, it is naturally fire resistant which helps when blasted out of something that uses an explosion for power.I'm just wondering how.. this wool works good today?
And now because of a whatever he posted.. it was no good back then?
I mention. The maybe used that. Good range reports. I used it in my Shotgun.. modern wool wads though. They worked good.
I say yea maybe right.. they used that then too..
This guy's jumping up my..
Click on the word "HERE" in my post. It's a link. The book title is below (and is from 1791, not 1797.)Dude what source did you post.
It's like a not even a sentence
We're talking about raw, unwoven wool.Wool works because it’s usually a bit thicker when woven, especially blankets, it is naturally fire resistant which helps when blasted out of something that uses an explosion for power.
We're talking about raw, unwoven wool.
As for patches tied around balls, I believe this was the origin of bullet boards- to hold the patch and ball together and facilitate sewing the patch closed. Pop them out, put them in the bag, less to fumble with in the field.
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