I got to using a full pan on all of my flint rifles and .62 smoothbore. Works for me. If I don't completely ignore my flint and the buildup of fouling around the pan and on the frizzen's base, ignition is extremely fast on all of them. I dont' wipe the pan, but looked at it when priming every shot last Sunday - about 60 shots fired, maybe 70. There seemed to be never more than 1 or 2 shot's of fouling on the surface and wiping that off fora few shots didn't do anything positive that was noticable. What did make a difference was cleaning the fouling off the frizzen and off the pan's anvil so that it sat flat. the negative I noticed that was after a number of perfectly fine shots, maybe 30 or 40, the frizzen wasn't closing off the pan and I started to get missfires, even though I could see sparks every 'trip' of the cock. Taylor said "The sparks aren't going into the pan". I scraped the fouling off with my patch knife and ignition was restored. The change in striking angle must have caused the direction of spark 'throw'.
I was shooting bevel down with a quite thin 'white' flint, which was striking the top of the frizzen, just barely down from the curl and scraping full length. That was evident by the scrapes in the fouling. After the frizzen wasn't closing, the flint was striking further down which not only reduced sparks, but sprayed them out to the left and ahead of the pan - for some reason. Trunign that flint over made the sparks hit the pan perfectly, but only struck 1/4 of tghe frizzen's face. Some flints work best one way or the other, I've found - depends on their thickness and angles. At times, bevel up strikes too low - turn it over and bingo - perfect ignition and visa-vis.