paulvallandigham
Passed On
- Joined
- Jan 9, 2006
- Messages
- 17,537
- Reaction score
- 89
Rsty: It depends on the choice of Over Shot ( OS) cards you use. I suggest that you use two OS cards, and poke a hole in each of them off-center so that you can stack them so the holes don't line up. When in doubt, over OS cards that are one gauge bigger than your gun. With two cards you are not likely to seem them come loose, or lose shot rolling out the barrel. It can happen when only one card is used.
Use a awl to poke a hole ( pin-sized is all you need to let air out) in the OS cards at home, so you can do a whole bag of them while watching TV. The hole lets air out of the barrel as you are seating the cards. This keeps the edges solid, and in contact with the barrel, rather than turn up edges, break the seal, and let gases escape out the sides of the cards, screwing up patterns. The air will escape through the holes, and when the load leaves the muzzle, the air outside the barrel will rush through the hole in the first card to separate it from the second card, so that both cards will quickly fall away from the shot, to the ground. YOu can also use 4 OS cards over the powder, and skip using the 1/8" OP wad, the 1/2" cushion wad, lube or not, so you only carry OS cards with you on a hunt. Simple. You can help your patterns by lubing the barrel after seating the OS cards on top of the shot. That greases the barrels so that the shot slides over the surface, rather than scrape off lead on the barrel as it goes out the gun. Lead streaks ruin subsequent groups, and require lead solvent, and bore brushes to remove. The lube you put on the full barrel protects it from rusting while in the field, lubes the shot to slide by, and then softens the carbon residue as the powder gases pass over the lubed bores. If you quickly run a slightly damped patch down the barrel after the shot, then a dry patch, you will be ready to load a once fired barrel all day long.
Use a awl to poke a hole ( pin-sized is all you need to let air out) in the OS cards at home, so you can do a whole bag of them while watching TV. The hole lets air out of the barrel as you are seating the cards. This keeps the edges solid, and in contact with the barrel, rather than turn up edges, break the seal, and let gases escape out the sides of the cards, screwing up patterns. The air will escape through the holes, and when the load leaves the muzzle, the air outside the barrel will rush through the hole in the first card to separate it from the second card, so that both cards will quickly fall away from the shot, to the ground. YOu can also use 4 OS cards over the powder, and skip using the 1/8" OP wad, the 1/2" cushion wad, lube or not, so you only carry OS cards with you on a hunt. Simple. You can help your patterns by lubing the barrel after seating the OS cards on top of the shot. That greases the barrels so that the shot slides over the surface, rather than scrape off lead on the barrel as it goes out the gun. Lead streaks ruin subsequent groups, and require lead solvent, and bore brushes to remove. The lube you put on the full barrel protects it from rusting while in the field, lubes the shot to slide by, and then softens the carbon residue as the powder gases pass over the lubed bores. If you quickly run a slightly damped patch down the barrel after the shot, then a dry patch, you will be ready to load a once fired barrel all day long.