Great info about using a smaller diameter powder measure than the bore size, Gents. I am a bit embarrassed to say that's something I never thought about, but my life has never been on the line while trying to reload a muzzleloader. Looks like a couple antler tip measures I have are going to get chamfered down on the outside.
I've made a LOT of paper cahtridges over the years, but most of them have been for reenacting, so there was no ball in the cahtridge. I've also wondered where the paper came from to make cahtridges outside what would have been issued to troops in the regular military forces. Paper was a lot more expensive in 1750 to 1800 than it is today. Also, many people did not read - especially those on the frontier. And for those who did read, books were extremely expensive or hard to get. For many families, the only book they had was a family bible.
Something else I've thought about was while most folks armed with rifles would not have used paper cahtridges, personally, I would have liked to have had a half dozen or so made up for close range fighting. A paper cahtridge usually won't seal a bore like a patch, but depending on the thickness of the paper, it might have done it well enough to hit a man size target in the torso at close range. I know in emergency situations, they would have just used a ball without a patch at close range, but I've often wondered if some of them may have made some paper cahtridges for rifles.
In the late 1970's, I was in a primitive event where for a change most things were going right. I stuck the tomahawk three times and something very unusual for me, I actually stuck my knife three times. I had never been very good at starting a fire with flint and steel, but on that day, I had fire in just four seconds. Surprised me so much I almost burnt my eyebrows. Can't remember what the first target was we shot at, but the .735 ball and patch combination put it on target for the first round. THEN Murphy started clogging on me. I could not for the life of me get another patched ball down my Brown Bess Carbine. It was a very hot and humid day and I guessed the humidity was causing the bore to foul much more than normal. I didn't have thinner patch material on me and I would have been disqualified for any shots remaining if I left the left the area to get thinner patching. So I finally decided to forget the patch and go with just powder and ball. Oh, great, my next shot was on the axe blade. I wasn't confident at all, but still took careful aim and fired. I was shocked the ball split on the axe blade and broke both clay pigeons. Two more follow up shots on targets out to a little over 50 yards were also right on target. (We did not place the targets at exact ranges so everyone had to figure where their gun shot at each range.) The only shot I missed was a small steel buffler silhouette at what turned out to be 73 yards, though the folks watching said the ball hit just beside it. I would never have believed a Brown Bess carbine would have been that accurate without a patch (even with heavy fouling in the bore) unless I had to try shooting it that way on that day. For whatever reason, the conditions were never again where I had to shoot the Bess with out my regular patch material, though. It was just a fluke on that day.