Me too when I had one.
Daryl, the wasp nest isn't there to form a gasket, it's there to prevent powder getting contaminated if left loaded for some time. (from tallow)
According to Sam Fadala, who seems to be the first(I'd ever heard of) to use Wasp Nest between his patched ball and the powder, it is to prevent the powder gases from blowing past the ball and
patch my .58, with both just a patched ball and again with a barrier wad between the patched ball and powder, I noted 0 difference in speed. He noticed a large difference, showing his ball and
patch combination sucked - or blew. He thought this proved a ball and patch could not seal- had he used a real patch, he'd have seen the error of his ways - back in 1978, instead of writing that
drivel about anti-gasgets and wasp nest to prevent blowby for all these years.
As for your use, Richard, this makes total sense. When hunting back in the 1980's, I too thought I needed a barrier between the oiled patch and powder, so used to use a slice of 14bore fiber
wad.
When I tried using a wad of anything beneath the ball in my .45 rifle, I lost accuracy. I then experimented with using no barrier wad between the lubed patch and powder and could so no
deleterious effect on accuracy or velocity, in either my .69 nor .45. I will note, my .69 (14 bore) was not particular about wads or no wads, oil or water based, accuracy & point of impact being
unchanged. The smaller bore usually change poi with a change in lube.