I expect those who are consistent in seating the ball are probably more consistent in all aspects of preping and loading as well as measuring.
A rifled musket was a smoothbore that had been rifled sometime after manufacture. A rifle-musket was a military arm built with a rifled barrel such as the Springfield models of 1861 & 1863. A rifle (US military) was an arm built with a heavy walled rifled barrel usually 33" in length, examples are the 1841 Mississippi, the 1855 rifle from Harpers Ferry and the 1863 Remington "Zouave". Is there anything else I can do to add to the confusion?
The rifling in a CW 'rifled musket' was part of the manufacturing process. It was not an afterthought. The CW 'rifled musket' is, in reality, a rifle. The 'musket' term was a carry over from earlier days of when smoothbores, like the Brown Bess, etc., were used in warfare. The term 'musket' has become sorta iconic with many long guns.
Your comment is not allowed this thread has ended.When all else fails.....get a 12# hammer and give 'er hell!!
This from a thread posted back in 2007... referred to the Kadooty. And other methods of seating the ball.Kadoubty is right. as for pressure seating ,I have watched a man using a guage operated by two lugs on the muzzle to hook a strain guage,showing exactly how many pounds pressure applied to the ball. He shot not much better than the rest of us.Bob
Those fellows back in 2007. Thought she sung her last stanza.I guess the fat lady caught another breath.
More of a friendly pat really.
Guns with patent breeches, CVA side bolsters especially, benefit from being rotated towards the lock and given a gentle "slap" or two on the opposite side of the stock. (opposite of the lock). after the powder is poured down the barrel. This helps to ensure that powder makes it's way into the bolster, and settle the charge.
I never understood why to slap on the opposite side. Wouldn't that move the powder away from the bolster?
Makes no difference which side you lightly tap (no need to hammer on it)I never understood why to slap on the opposite side. Wouldn't that move the powder away from the bolster? Rapping a hammer handle down on a hard surface seats the hammer head further down on the handle. Rapping on the opposite side of the of the lock will move the powder charge away from the lock, thus the bolster, right?
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