If you have steel loading rod with a jag on it, try this during your match if you load from the bench. After seating your ball down in the muzzle with the short starter take a cleaning patch and lick it and place it on the jag and push the ball down against the powder cleaning the fouling as you seat the ball. This precludes you sending clinkers down against the communication hole blocking ignition. It is really quick to do. Swabbing as you are seating the ball. Never a misfire again.
Bob
Interesting concept, however as I seat the patched ball, I am swabbing the previous shot's fouling and pushing it down with the ball. As that ball and fouling is seated on top of the powder, it is
impossible to block anything with it. There is no need nor value in putting another patch on the rod that would wipe the bore above the patched ball. All my patched balls have .005" to .010"
compression in the bottom of each groove. This is what cleans the bore between shots, just as Ned Robert's wrote in 1934, in "The Muzzle Loading Cap Lock Rifle". I find those rules work exactly
the same in flinters too, of course.
I do not get misfires - except the odd time with a flinter. When shooting the trail, I just load, prime and shoot, paying no attention to the flint. If I have have a hang-fire, I napp the fling. If I
have a flash in the pan, it is because the frizzen edge has shoved a bit of fouling over the vent. I prick the vent- next shot goes off. If I have a complete failure to make fire, the flint needs
napping - I do that along with the next one and likely the next 10 to 20 after that will go off perfectly. I just see no reason nor value in all this wiping.
However, if you want to wipe after or during seating the ball and this helps your shooting experience, have at it.
If you want to wipe between shots - do that too, or any combination of the above. That just seems like too much fuss for me and I'd rather be shooting than wiping.