I use a combo of liquid hand soap and non freezing ww washer sovent. I can shoot all day without wiping. My gun seems to load esier after the second or third shot. After a shoot I wipe the barrel and the patch is hardley black at all.
The solution to making sure the ball is all the way down is to mark the ram rod. Keep the horn away from the barrel. Keep you hand away from the line of the bore and your face away when putting the powder down the barrel out of the powder measure.
Don't BS on the firing line.
I get nervous when I see a bunch of guys crowding around the bond fire with powder horns on.
Daryl talked me into using a good wet patch. Best tip I ever had. Thanks Daryl. I use a combo of liquid hand soap and non freezing ww washer solvent. I can shoot all day without wiping. My gun seems to load easier after the second or third shot. After a shoot I wipe the barrel and the patch is hardly black at all.
The solution to making sure the ball is all the way down is to mark the ram rod. Keep the horn away from the barrel. Keep you hand away from the line of the bore and your face away when putting the powder down the barrel out of the powder measure.
Don't BS on the firing line.
I get nervous when I see a bunch of guys crowding around the bond fire with powder horns on.
Daryl talked me into using a good wet patch. Best tip I ever had. Thanks Daryl.
Jerry- you are most certainly welcome. Also - you are repeating yourself -- is this an age thing - or merely an attempt to 'get the word out'?
I see wiping between shots are being for two reasons. 1/. - choice - as in Swordmanjohn's post above. It's a free world.
----------------------------------------------------------------------- 2/.,- "have to" - this is where Jerry's repeating post hopefully gets through. Not only the condition of the patch's lube, BUT - the crown is of utmost importance. If the ball is hard to start- curts the patch, falttens out the ball as it refuses to swage into the bore, the crown needs attentions. It is as simple as shoving a cleaning patch down the bore about 2", then getting a piece of emery cloth, grit 320, and using your thumb rotating back and forth- turn the barrel 90 degrees and doing it some more - do it wet, do it dry, doesn't matter - it will change the crown to where anyone can load a tight combo.
My wife, at 120 pounds when we were married, or 125 pounds now, has no difficulty loading the combinations I've been speaking of. She is not strong - yet finds seating and pushing the balls down no problem - no hammering needed - whack, push - done. The crown of her rifle barrel is not coned, but has a nicely radiused crown with no sharp angled edges as on ALL comercial barrels and some custom ones as well. Many crowns are cut on lathes with acursory wipe with emery and that's it. They have sharp edges or corners. These edges or corners cause the ball to wad-up and refuse to swage into the bore with the patch. The also cut the patch at the lands which are also sharp. Smoothing these crown edges is a simple matter and is all we do.