Taylor, you miss my gist. But I appreciate your effort in posting.
Sure, you and I and the rest _here_ know. I quote those threads just to show that all the details have been hashed out here before-so those who don't know can learn how to leave the wiping behind.
But I bumped into some of the ROW (Rest of World) recently and they have no idea. NONE at all. I know we're not trying to keep it a secret. Just funny how all the other modes of operation persist.
I just wonder how a wiper would respond if he shot next to a non-wiper who demonstrated a higher rate of accurate fire?
There are none so blind... i reckon.
The non wiper MIGHT shoot better with a water based patch lube. But MY bet is that ON PAPER, a wiped bore will out shoot the unwiped every time. IF the person operating the rifle is UNIFORM in his wiping technique and uses the right patch lube. A great many people shoot low precision matches. Steel plates and such. This is not the same as a rest match shot on paper targets. Shooting steel targets is a lot of fun. But loads that will win a match like this are not in the running in serious paper matchs.
In one of the links the poster was having problems with ballistol/water mix and Swiss. I suspect its the mineral oil in the lube that caused the ring. 3:1 is a VERY heavy oil load in the mix.
I shoot FFF in a 54, 90 gr. And use animal oil or tallow. It does not foul excessively and produces far less problems than 100 gr of FFF Goex did.
My 16 bore with 140 gr of FF Swiss fouls very little indeed. But I shoot this rifle with animal oils too. Its not a target gun.
This is another thing that some do not take into consideration. Hunting is not target shooting. The accuracy requirement and loading process is different.
If I were to use a water lube it would likely be water or a water soap mix.
I use water and WS oil mix to get the oil in the patches then let the water evaporate.
Its a modified petroleum oil I am sure but since I wipe every shot when using it there is no worry.
No you don't have to wipe every shot. But the guys I shoot against, if you want to do very well, you wipe.
Hunting or shooting at hit or miss steel plates is different than scoring ring targets and is way different than string measure which is the more precise way of scoring. So what the rifle is USED for will be one factor is determining how the rifle is loaded.
One other factor in not wiping and shooting long strings. There have been a number of accidents over the years and some people seriously injured from fouling build up in the breech. The first of these I read of was in the 1960s during the Nationals at Friendship when a pistol shooter shot the rod and ball through his wrist (or hand). Examination of the pistol found heavy fouling in the breech they held enough heat or an ember that lit the charge when rammed.
Its still happening. I don't shoot 50 rounds without wiping the breech out. I came to that conclusion when I read the account of the pistol shooter shooting himself.
Dan