Larry – I have an idea that may save some work milling the barrel:
Make a plug with the same thread as the white lightening, and a 0.062" hole, or whatever flash hole size you want to test. The initial length would be the same length as the maximum wall thickness that you want to test. After testing, remove the plug and shorten it to the next test length. You could do this a file and save the trouble of milling the barrel.
I don’t think it would be a problem if the plug initially intruded into the powder charge.
Speed is one thing, reliability is another. I have four flintlocks, a .54 and a 12 bore with white lightening vent liners, and two 10 bores with straight holes. The straight hole 10 bores are as fast and reliable as the white lightening liners, at least as far as I can tell. However, they have substantially larger flash holes. The flash holes in the white lightening liners are 0.062”. I started with 0.062“ holes in the 10 bores, but as I recall, the guns failed to fire at least half the time. I gradually enlarged the holes until I got reliable ignition at 0.081"
So, was the ignition speed of the 10 bores with a 0.062” flash hole the same as the speed with an 0.081” hole (that is, when the 0.062” hole managed to fire)? I have no idea, and I would not care to speculate, however, it seems possible that with thicker walled barrels, ignition speed may be a function of both barrel wall thickness and flash hole diameter.
The 10 bores are 1 1/4” at the breech, so 0.2375" wall thickness.
.