Please feel free to sent me all your dreaded Pyrodex. I will dispose of it for you.
I will be shooting a Traditions 50cal Kentucky.You didn't say what rifle you are intending to shoot. That can make a difference too.
The gentleman is reasonably correct. Triple Seven is much harder to ignite than a real black powder such as GOEX. But it can be done. You would need a #11 Magnum cap and one of the nipple designed to direct a hot flash through the nipple to the main charge. These are the Hot Shot, Spitfire and Red Hot nipples. Be sure to get the nipple with the correct thread for your rifle.
Regarding the idea of increasing the size of the nipple hole "a little" - that is probably okay but for me it would be hard to know when "a little" is too much,
Makes a whole lot of sense.The Traditions Kentucky (percussion) has a drum and nipple. The flash has to get into the drum and turn down the flash channel to make a turn again into the chambered breech. Of course the heat from the flash can flow through all these turns, but there is a distance and the heat does cool down as it flows. That is one of the reasons we slap the rifle at the breech to settle some of the powder deeper in the powder chamber and along the flash channel. The theory is the powder near the nipple seat starts burning and that heat from the burning powder sets off the powder in the chamber. So a hot percussion cap can set off both GOEX black powder and a higher temperature powder such as Triple Seven or Pyrodex.
Ultimately after all that theory, the recommendation is to use GOEX real black powder as the first choice. The second choice is to develop a procedure to bring more heat to the powder chamber to ignite the hard to ignite substitute powders. This can include special nipples, hotter percussion caps, mechanical settling of powder at the breech and special incantations that get the powder to ignite.
Regarding the idea of increasing the size of the nipple hole "a little" - that is probably okay but for me it would be hard to know when "a little" is too much, especially with my eye just a few inches away from the nipple. As far as how many shots between cleanings - there is no doubt that BP substitutes will allow more shots. When I was shooting rockchucks with my muzzleloader, I would have appreciated getting eight or ten shots before I had to swab out the bore - and if I got a hang fire, it really didn't bother me too much. But when I am going after big game, with all the time and money that it takes - and considering that if I am lucky enough to get a shooting opportunity, it may be the only one of the year, as long as it is available the ONLY propellant that I will use, and recommend is good, old-fashioned black powder.
good shot Grenadier 1758.! You sound like you speak from experience.Although the North Carolina Mountain Moonshine ain't all that bad if that's all we got.
Question, On a 50cal. Percussion Rifle, I would like to get some input on what type of powder to use. Goex or Triple Seven.... ~Thank you~
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