If one graduates a step up to using paper cartridges almost exclusively what is the point in carrying either a horn or flask? I guess they still make fine decoration but are they still worn or just hung on the wall?
Not much point. What are you shooting these from?If one graduates a step up to using paper cartridges almost exclusively what is the point in carrying either a horn or flask? I guess they still make fine decoration but are they still worn or just hung on the wall?
Powder, wad, and then the ball.Are you putting powder only in the cartridges or loading the ball also?
Powder, wad, and then the ball.
@Griz44Mag makes excellent pure lead cast balls for a very reasonable price. More reasonable than commercially available swaged LRBs. If you're gonna spend money on them I can't recommend him enough. Cartridges are convenient if one has a stock of them well made and in store. But I reckon the appeal of the old horn, patching, and ball is that one does not "need" to wait for cartridges. It is interesting though that, from very early, Colt's sold paper cartridges. Yet each gun came with a flask and mould. Reckon one is not superior t'other.Presently I don't have any complete cartridges to take pictures of. I foolishly shot them up up last month in anticipation of making some more, now supplys are low. I might have enough "stuff" to make up a new batch but just haven't gotten around to it yet. I gave my wheel weight lead away and was planning on using store-bought swaged balls. For medical reasons I'm not melting wheel weights or any other lead presently. I'm kind of doing nothing (drs. orders) right now.I'm kind of in that experimental stage and this thread was kind of a "what if" question. I'm using Pyrodex and Hornaday balls presently. Everything is sort of experimental at the moment.And that's one of the reasons for the opening question, that was part of the experiment. I was kind of hoping for some input from y'all.
My father-in-law claims that he has never misplaced anything, but that his wife "tidies things away" all the time. When it comes to powder horns, all mine are slung to a length just above the accompanying bag. I resolved to have one bag and one horn for each gun. Granted, which bag and which horn goes with what gun is apt to change every seven of the Lord's days. But, I try to remain consistent so that if I decide to up and go I know exactly what to grab.I just may have to send Grizz a PM and see about some lead balls. In the mean time I'll go on experimenting. I had a gallon bucket of nitered envelopes made of coffee filters.Now they are not to be found. I'm guessing the cleaning lady (my wife's neice) threw them out. Oh which shoulder do YOU hang a flask from?
only real worry with a hard ball is getting it stuckWheel weights are far too hard of an alloy for ball anyway. Use pure lead. I got most of mine from scrap lead plumbing pipe from old houses.
I'm a little confused. There is a paper cartridge, used for a rifle. The bullet is removed from one end, the powder pored down the bore, then the paper bunched up and rammed down as a wad, then the bullet.
On revolvers, the most common (only) method used by the military were combustible cartridges, the whole thing simply loaded as is.
I haven't shot paper cartridges but few times from a rifle, is the paper enough of a patch?Like I said I still experimenting.
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