DuncNZ
54 Cal.
Patent breaches are not a curse , they work and are historically correct in many cases . All you have to do with a patent breach is to learn how to clean it .
I have found Schuetzen powder to be a real fouling problem ,especially in hot weather , not like Goex or Swiss , I would recommend using Schuetzen fffg rather than ffg powder in any rifle . I only use it because it is all I can get .
I have had to go from a 7-1 Balistol / water mix to a 5-1 mix as the weather has warmed up in our South Pacific Spring .
I use a one size smaller button jag and loose fitting military type 4"X2" cleaning patches ,very slightly dampened with a spray of water .I find this pulls the fouling out , not pushes it down . I don't bother using a dry patch follow up as I don't think the water has touched the bore on the way out as the patch is so covered in crud and dry patches have no place in any barrel , they just get stuck . This is not cleaning , just conditioning the bore for the next shot by preventing a build up of fowling .
If you are having ignition problems with your flinter I'd recommend you check the flash hole is not too small , break the sharp outside edge of the flash hole with a slight chamfer using a larger size drill bit , just turned with your fingers and use a pricker to make sure the hole is clear after loading each shot .
BTW I wash all my cleaning patches after each use and peg them out on the washing line to dry , I do this to try to recycle patches and I found it makes them fluffier and they pull more crud out .
Every time you remove a screw, with the exception of a nipple, from your breach area you increase wear on the threads , risk cross threading or not screwing it all the way in and it can blow out ,Over the years I have seen so called clean out screws , percussion drums , nipples and flash hole liners all come loose , fortunately without injury to any one .
I have found Schuetzen powder to be a real fouling problem ,especially in hot weather , not like Goex or Swiss , I would recommend using Schuetzen fffg rather than ffg powder in any rifle . I only use it because it is all I can get .
I have had to go from a 7-1 Balistol / water mix to a 5-1 mix as the weather has warmed up in our South Pacific Spring .
I use a one size smaller button jag and loose fitting military type 4"X2" cleaning patches ,very slightly dampened with a spray of water .I find this pulls the fouling out , not pushes it down . I don't bother using a dry patch follow up as I don't think the water has touched the bore on the way out as the patch is so covered in crud and dry patches have no place in any barrel , they just get stuck . This is not cleaning , just conditioning the bore for the next shot by preventing a build up of fowling .
If you are having ignition problems with your flinter I'd recommend you check the flash hole is not too small , break the sharp outside edge of the flash hole with a slight chamfer using a larger size drill bit , just turned with your fingers and use a pricker to make sure the hole is clear after loading each shot .
BTW I wash all my cleaning patches after each use and peg them out on the washing line to dry , I do this to try to recycle patches and I found it makes them fluffier and they pull more crud out .
Every time you remove a screw, with the exception of a nipple, from your breach area you increase wear on the threads , risk cross threading or not screwing it all the way in and it can blow out ,Over the years I have seen so called clean out screws , percussion drums , nipples and flash hole liners all come loose , fortunately without injury to any one .