This barrel has a .398" bore, with .418" grove diameter (.010" deep rifling)
I used a .400" ball and a .0235" mattress ticking patch in this barrel and loaded it with just pushing down hard on the starter's knob, with the 3/8" cupped brass peg on the patched ball.
This actually makes a slightly elongated round ended slug out of that ball. The normal ball I used, was from a .395" Lyman mould, that cast a .398" x .398" ball. It loaded quite similarly and
did not need a short starter. It could be loaded into the muzzle with just a choked up ram rod.
The pure lead ball and patch conforms/forms into the bore. From there it was short started - ie: pegged 6" down the bore, then pushed the rest of the way onto the
powder with the rifle's 3.8" hickory rod in 2 or 3 tap/pushes.
A well 'shaped' crown is vital.
That same day I tested loading without smacking the starter's knob to get the patched ball into the muzzle, Leatherbelly, our late friend had his .40 made with a cone an inch or so deep and could not load the same ball and patch even with a starter. I tried his rifle with the starter and it was very difficult to get the patched ball started into the bore. I surmised this was due to the longer friction surface of the gradual cone.
Cones do not make it easier to load tight combinations - at least in his barrel. Physics indicates the long friction surface creates more resistance then the shorter crown to the forming of the patch and ball. Corbin's metal forming dies have this same angle and radiused surface. I merely duplicated it and it can be done with the end of your thumb and some emery or wet/dry paper.
The combination I used, measures: .400 + .0235 + .0235" = .447" - which is .447" - .418" = .029 total compression in the bottom of the grooves = .0145" in the bottom of each groove.
THAT is a "tight" load, yet doable with no more than a 3/8" hickory rod.