The most complicated patch lube ever :

Muzzleloading Forum

Help Support Muzzleloading Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
We all learned at a quite young age that mother's saliva was the strongest cleaning agent known and it worked best when applied with a handkerchief. :D
thank's for the trip down memory lane. I do remember my mother spitting / licking a handkerchief to make my BOBO, all better!.
 
I was at the range today and saw a guy using spit on his patches , that got me wondering what is in saliva which makes it better than water as a lube .Turns out it is the most complicated lube ever
This is what I found on Wikipedia

Produced in salivary glands, human saliva comprises 99.5% water, but also contains many important substances, including electrolytes, mucus, antibacterial compounds and various enzymes.[1]
How about that each shot kills millions of bacteria :) :)
So that is why spit balls work. Dang, I learn more stuff here than I did in any school.
 
I was at the range today and saw a guy using spit on his patches , that got me wondering what is in saliva which makes it better than water as a lube .Turns out it is the most complicated lube ever
This is what I found on Wikipedia

Produced in salivary glands, human saliva comprises 99.5% water, but also contains many important substances, including electrolytes, mucus, antibacterial compounds and various enzymes.[1]
How about that each shot kills millions of bacteria :) :)
I did the same analysis before my medication review…
 
As a tobacco grower(we Taylors been at it since about 1680 in Eastern North Carolina), I'm gonna be the arse who points out that modern oral tobacco has a lot of sugar and salt in it. Dip(unless you take it up the nose it ain't snuff) is full of salt which ain't great for steel or iron. Chaw, chew, twist, etc is full of sugar and salt. Sugar ain't bad for metal, but not beneficial either. Tobacco is what it is because it is naturally able to kill most of the things that might want to harm it via poison(only those ******* horn worms are immune). Take that for what it's worth.

To end, please, for the sake of us tobacco growers getting an even worse name, clean your barrels after using spit to lube. I say that as a dedicated Skoal Mint dipper(cigarette smoker from age 14-24) with half a million tobacco seeds in store, 200 cigars in the humidor, and three pounds of self-grown pipe tobacco in sight of this computer. Nicotiana Responsibly
 
Copenhagen Wintergreen Spit Patch Lube…lubes and cleans at the same time and smells good. Shoot all day without swabbing. The only caution is on hot summer days…drink plenty of water or you will get COTTON MOUTH!!!
 
As a tobacco grower(we Taylors been at it since about 1680 in Eastern North Carolina), I'm gonna be the arse who points out that modern oral tobacco has a lot of sugar and salt in it. Dip(unless you take it up the nose it ain't snuff) is full of salt which ain't great for steel or iron. Chaw, chew, twist, etc is full of sugar and salt. Sugar ain't bad for metal, but not beneficial either. Tobacco is what it is because it is naturally able to kill most of the things that might want to harm it via poison(only those ******* horn worms are immune). Take that for what it's worth.

To end, please, for the sake of us tobacco growers getting an even worse name, clean your barrels after using spit to lube. I say that as a dedicated Skoal Mint dipper(cigarette smoker from age 14-24) with half a million tobacco seeds in store, 200 cigars in the humidor, and three pounds of self-grown pipe tobacco in sight of this computer. Nicotiana Responsibly
Small farm in New Richmond Ohio. The 50’s. As kids we plucked the seedlings from the beds, transplanted them to the field, later wormed and suckered the plants. Hoed the rows. The field agent would come and survey the field and more often than not cut down a few rows. We were limited to a few acres and seemed to always over plant. Later the plants were cut, speared on tobacco sticks and hung in the barn loft to dry. Stripped wrapped and taken to the auctions. Our only cash crop.
I was up to smoking 3 packs a day, and by 1984 I had switched to a pipe. By 1989 I was able to give up tobacco altogether. 😁
 
Back
Top