I don't see how a few grains of powder sticking to a patch can create a problem worth worrying about.
Someone please help me out here.
I'm with you on this.
If the ball goes where I point it, so what if a few grains of powder remain....?
Because mine dont always. I have been dealing with a lot of fliers and not able to explain why until now.
I'd rather suspect a poor ball-fit combined with maybe too thin of a patch, are the 2 main reasons for your fliers.
What caliber is your rifle?
What size ball are you using?
What does your patch material mic out at?
Have you taken the time to work up the ultimate load for your rifle?
Were you getting fliers while you were doing "load development"?
Usually,.... a good starting point is, a ball .010"-.005" smaller than your rifle's bore diameter, and a tight-weave COTTON patch material that mics .015"-.020", followed by finding a powder charge that gives you the tightest groups.
"LUBE" can most generally be anything that allows you to get the ball down the bore, softens fouling after firing, and doesn't contain petroleum.
I'll even go out an a limb (now) and say,.... that too much lube (without going to ridiculous extremes) will likely cause you less problems, than too little lube.