ckid said:
T-star
I have used nothing but 3F black too. I realise that caps are cheap I just felt it might be more of a time saver than a money saver. One thing I have to pick up is a capping tool, they look like a real time saver. One of the fellows I shoot with shoots remington style revolvers and uses one of those tools to load the cylinders on the bench rather than in the gun, he also has a calibrated spout on his flask the dispenses the proper charge and he caps with a capping tool - talk about quick reloads. I'd say he can load his remingtons in about half the time it takes me to stoke my Walker!
well now we're talkinG GUN- a walker- y'all just made me salivate
i was keeping in mind we are dealing with a complete newbie( no offense intended) and i was trying to help him out as much as possible safely as he's somewhere in nowhere , saskatchewan- kind of like doing surgery over the phone, and i've never dealt with a pietta before- i didn't want to put him wise to any of the so-called short cuts before learning the basics-
personally i use a flask instead of a horn, and use a piece of chrome water supply pipe cut for 30 grains( which is probably an overload for the pietta) as i'm using a ruger old army, which is a ruger blackhawk 44 mag set up for blackpowder-far stronger revolver- therefore , i had to tune my response with that in mind
i use an inline brass capper that holds 18 caps -incidentally the typical spout on your horn throws 60 grains of fffg, and the pistol flask throws about 20-25
and they are interchangable, but cutting the big spout off still leaves you with a hole that's too big for your pistol cylinder- that thing is meant to pour down the barrel of rifle- you need the taper or something that will fit in the end of the cylinder, hence the water supply pipe( that's the pipe that goes between your taps and the cut-offs or piping- you have tap the outside of the pipe for the thread of your horn /flask and don't use the plastic- it's too thick-
i normally load at the safety point, but cap only at the firing line just in case i trip or something on the way there so the gun can't go off- incidentally, some of the so-called wonder lubes tend to run when the weather gets warm, a problem i've never had with crisco- i've also used wheel bearing lubricant- you should see the goo that stuff leaves on the target