TOF, thanks, I'd like to see that.
OK. When I lived in Illinois, the largest barrelmaker in the USA offered us the use of a pressure gun and commercial bullet catch media to test roundball obturation. The pressure gun was given to him by the US Government for a contract he did the development for. He also offered to make us barrels to fit it and the molds to accompany them. He also stated that Remington had already done this research back in the 40's and he had read such research that proved round balls do obturate. Pletch and I were going to do it again for current publication. I was supposed to take the pressure gun home, but it weighed more than my truck could carry and I had no way of unloading or storing it, and I moved south in the interim.
Our premise at the time was as follows:
Lead is a plastic solid. If you place a pure lead roundball on a sheet of glass and let it set, eventually it will develop a flat spot on the base because of this plasticity. If you drop a roundball from 3 ft the same thing will occur. Likewise, if you bounce your ramrod on a loaded ball, it will flatten and foreshorten. This is obvious if you eject the ball after doing so. Clearly, none of these events come close to the pressure exerted on a ball during firing.
The next step was to eliminate any variables. A cloth patch is softer than lead and will resist obturation thru compression. Patching was to be eliminated. Likewise, rifling served no purpose in proving the premise. We proposed to have smoothbored barrels in various calibers made with molds that would throw balls near exact bore diameter which could be started without any force and had little or no windage past the projectile when fired.
Starting with the smallest loads and working up, we could determine at what pressure the charge overcame the plasticity of the lead and foreshortened the roundball. This would be evidenced by a flattened ring at the bearing surface of the ball where it contacted the barrel. The crushers of the pressure gun would enable us to measure the pressure at which this occurred. It was postulated that the larger the ball, the less the presssure required for obturation, because of the physics involved.
Sadly, we were never able to reaffirm Remington's findings for the reasons stated above and without a pressure gun, I see no other way to do so.