Hmmmm, the Walker came with a Prichet mold, no? Is Prichet the right term? The cutouts were elongated in so many of the cap n ball pistols it seems. And the military liked paper cartridges. I think I’d have to respectfully disagree.
What I’m a bit curious about is despite the paper cartridges during the war we still read of people preferring a ball for its effectiveness. So I assume they had a mold for balls as well and possibly loaded up with those and used the cartridges for fast reloads if possible. The conicals then were just poor manstoppers it would seem.
The form of ball with more or less flat base and pointed nose was called a "Pickett ball".
Hmmmm, the Walker came with a Prichet mold, no? Is Prichet the right term? The cutouts were elongated in so many of the cap n ball pistols it seems. And the military liked paper cartridges. I think I’d have to respectfully disagree.
What I’m a bit curious about is despite the paper cartridges during the war we still read of people preferring a ball for its effectiveness. So I assume they had a mold for balls as well and possibly loaded up with those and used the cartridges for fast reloads if possible. The conicals then were just poor manstoppers it would seem.
Sorry, I misspelled Picket ball. See Ned Roberts Muzzleloading Caplock Rifle p 91 for pics and discussion.
This is the general form of all bullet moulds I've seen for revolver bullets. Lee made/makes a mould for a conical for revolvers that more resemble heeled pistol pullets. These shoot very well and their increased mass adds punch on critters allbeit at some loss of velocity.