Reading the 18th-century literature about shooting, you can easily get the idea the old boys were very imprecise, almost sloppy in their loading... a pipe bowl of powder and a pipe bowl and a half of shot, for instance. They tell of using glass marbles of approximately the size of your bore to make molds for lead balls, or as much powder as will cover the ball in the palm of your hand. We quibble over a grain or two of powder, but I've never seen that term used by them. I have a few references to ounces and drams, but none to indicate how they measured those, or if they used smaller units. Some of them surely must have gone at it in a more precise way, but any references I have are tangential, not direct descriptions. They say use powder equal to 1/4 or 1/2 the weight of the ball. They describe comparing the weight of powder in dry conditions to that in humid, a fairly demanding procedure, and of carefully weighing both shot and powder when making comparisons of the abilities of guns. But how they did that weighing they didn't say, not that I've seen.
They certainly had the means to measure things in the 18th century. I find references to several kinds of scales offered for sale, some of which were probably fairly sensitive for small weights. I've found:
pocket steelyards, several references
money scales, several
boxes with scales and weights
gold scales
"money scales and weights, ditto without scales;"
I expect the money and gold scales were balance beam scales, which can be very accurate for small weights.
Thomas Page knew about the weights of his powder and shot, because he said, "... I use the best powder, and put in equal measures of that and shot, which in weight is nearly as one to seven..." He was right about that ratio, and it's easy to check it out. What he was talking about is what we call a square or equal volume load. The load he described, 2 ounces of shot and equal volume of powder, is 875/123 = 7.1. If you check the ratio of the weight of any equal volume load, you will find it very close to 7.
I feel pretty certain they mostly did as we do, measure our components by volume, not weight, but they had to have a way of weighing things if they needed or wanted to. Does anyone have references actually describing the weighing of powder, shot or balls in the 18th century? Please post if you do.
Spence
They certainly had the means to measure things in the 18th century. I find references to several kinds of scales offered for sale, some of which were probably fairly sensitive for small weights. I've found:
pocket steelyards, several references
money scales, several
boxes with scales and weights
gold scales
"money scales and weights, ditto without scales;"
I expect the money and gold scales were balance beam scales, which can be very accurate for small weights.
Thomas Page knew about the weights of his powder and shot, because he said, "... I use the best powder, and put in equal measures of that and shot, which in weight is nearly as one to seven..." He was right about that ratio, and it's easy to check it out. What he was talking about is what we call a square or equal volume load. The load he described, 2 ounces of shot and equal volume of powder, is 875/123 = 7.1. If you check the ratio of the weight of any equal volume load, you will find it very close to 7.
I feel pretty certain they mostly did as we do, measure our components by volume, not weight, but they had to have a way of weighing things if they needed or wanted to. Does anyone have references actually describing the weighing of powder, shot or balls in the 18th century? Please post if you do.
Spence