There's another post here about ball, patch and bore combinations with a lot of good stuff in it. It raised a question that I have never had answered;
In the 1970's, when I first started, I had heard multiple times that the right combination is reached when you get a group that makes you nod approval and confirmed when your rifle cracks like a whip rather than bangs like a musket. At the Old Saratoga Muzzleloading club rendezvouses, the firing line was a wide open area between the camp and the cannon competition. Several of us with new guns would take off the earplugs and touch off one or two shots as if verifying the gun. Then the ear plugs would go back in for the obvious safety reason.
To this day I do that, and, if focused, I can dust the poker chips and chalk like the next guy once my guin is sighted in.
The question I have is this...
Where did that notion come from and does anybody else still do it or did my brief ( 15 year) absence whilst coddling Cowboy Action change that perception, making me one more step toward aging away from reality?
Thanks
Capgun