Dary, I typically only grease one side of the patch. Is it advisable to do both? ...
A thicker patch carries more lube. I'm no Daryl, but in response to above.
Like Taylor, my patches are saturated, then the excess is pressed out back into the appropriate container.
This "happens" whether I am shooting a water based "lube" for target shooting, or Neetsfoot Oil or Track's Mink Oil for hunting.
If you "take" the measurement of your barrel, groove to groove, then add double your patch thickness to the ball's actual diameter, they should come out at .005" or over, over the groove to groove measurement.
For me, getting way with merely meeting the groove to groove measurement happened in my .69 due to the weight of the ball obturating 'some' upon ignition.
It also occurred in a progressive depth military barrel in .577 cal. The load combo was a very tight one on the lands, and recovered patches showed no scorching in the grooves even though the patch did not go to the bottoms of them, at the breech, but a perfect seal still occurred, as is needed for good accuracy.
A barrier patch or wad between the patched ball and powder will actually help with inferior combinations, though, as many people have found.