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Felt wad

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Lyle

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Joined
Dec 20, 2010
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259
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Arizona
Does anyone use a felt wad between the powder and ball? If so, do you use a lubed wad or a dry wad? The felt wads from Cabella’s is so wet the oil drips from them.
 
I normally do. I have used the treated WonderWads with good success, but got tired of paying for them. I now cut my own from felt, using a wadcutting punch, and treat them with melted tallow and beeswax. This is a mild PITA, but costs nearly nothing, and most of my rifles like them. I'd be leery of wads which drip...
 
I have one rifle that requires the use of a felt wad over the powder to keep the patched ball out of a corroded area of the breach. The gun is .35 caliber is is vintage mid 1840's. I got the gun as payment in lieu of some work I did for a guy. The gun had been above his fire place mantle for close to 50 years. When I got the gun home and cleaned all of the black soot from the fireplace off of it I was surprised to see some really nice maple figure. When I check the bore, I found that the gun was loaded. Took me a bit to pull the ball and scraped out the hardened powder in the breech. That powder corroded the breech area such that a patched ball would get stuck in that area. By using a felt wad over the powder I keep the patched ball above the corroded area. Surprisingly, the gun shoots 1.5" groups at 50 yards from the bench.
I punch my felt wads from old felt hats, and uzse them dry over the powder charge.
 
I’ve used Circle Fly .125 cards that I soak in a hot solution of Bore Butter and bees wax for years. They form a tight seal and are cheap.
 
No, use lubed paper cartridges. The gun that I keep loaded has max. powder and bullet topped with a slight bit of lube, not to seal just to make cleaning easier.
 
I normally do. I have used the treated WonderWads with good success, but got tired of paying for them. I now cut my own from felt, using a wadcutting punch, and treat them with melted tallow and beeswax. This is a mild PITA, but costs nearly nothing, and most of my rifles like them. I'd be leery of wads which drip...

^^^^^^^^^^ - Like he said.
 
I have a bunch of tooling leather that I use as lubed wads for the smoothbore... Punch 'em out and give them a good soak in melted mink oil / beeswax lube then let them drain and you have some tiddly little wads that won't wet your powder... I still have a bunch of wonderwads for the revolvers so I haven't gone the leather route for them, maybe someday...
 
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