• This community needs YOUR help today. We rely 100% on Supporting Memberships to fund our efforts. With the ever increasing fees of everything, we need help. We need more Supporting Members, today. Please invest back into this community. I will ship a few decals too in addition to all the account perks you get.



    Sign up here: https://www.muzzleloadingforum.com/account/upgrades

Ball Creep

Muzzleloading Forum

Help Support Muzzleloading Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
Grenadier1758 makes an important point regarding the diameter of the jags we buy. I hate to tell some of ya'll but "50 caliber" ain't "50 caliber". Just about every "50 caliber" jag I have is slightly different from the others and behaves differently depending upon the wiping patch material I'm using, and which barrel it's in. Turning one down just a little is easy as he describes, and REALLY helps, especially so with flat breeched rifles ( as opposed to those with "patent breech". I shot patent breech rifles for 40 yrs before getting my first flat breech. NEVER had a problem with buildup in the breech area. When I started shooting my first flat breech rifle, I had all kinds of problems because I was using a jag/wiping patch combination that was simply too thick between shots. Using Dutch's dry patch system I was getting AWESOME groups, but my "slightly damp" wiping patch was pushing everything in the barrel down onto the breech face and eventually would develop delayed ignition. A little fine tuning of jag diameter and patch thickness solved that problem.
I DON'T WANT TO BUTT IN ON GETTING THE RIGHT SIZE JAG AS THAT IS IMPORTANT. WHAT IS ALSO OF IMOTANCE IS THAT WE USE SOFT BRASS IN JAGS SO THEY DON'T WEAR DOWN THE RIFLING IN THE BORE OF THE RIFLE. OTOH THE HARD STEEL OF THE BARREL RIFLING TENDS TO WEAR DOWN THE SOFT BRASS OF THE JAG. THIS MAKES IT SMALLERABOUT THE THIRD OR FOURTH YEAR I WAS AWARE THAT MY JAG WAS MORE OF A ROUND BALL THAN IT WAS LIKE THE HONEY DRIPPER IT HAD BEEN WHEN NEW AND THAT IT PROBABLY WASN'T DOING THE SAME JOB AS IT DID WHEN NEW. SO I REPLACED IT.
I HAVE OFTEN SUGGESTED WRITING DOWN EVERY SMALL THING INVOLVED IN YOUR LOADING WHEN EVERYTHING IS GOING RIGHT.SIXE OF BALL, AMOUNT OF POWDER, COMPRESSED THICKNESS OF THE SHOOTING PATCH, COMPRESSED THICKNESS OF THE WIPING PATCH AND THE WIDTH OF THE SOFT BRASS JAG.
IF YOU DON'T THINK THOSE MEASUREMENTS ARE IMPORTANT, TRY CHANGING ONE OR TWO AND SEE WHAT HAPPENS TO DAS WUNDERGROUPEN YOU HAVE BEEN PRODUCING.
DUTCH
 
Thank you Dutch.
To reiterate to my fellow shooters still looking for consistently excellent results: Record EVERYTHING.
I know, I know...a lot of folks in this sport of shooting patched roundballs out of 18th century rifles will tell you "Don't none of that matter" and for them, it probably doesn't, which is fine. Not a problem. OTOH: Some of us are wound a little tighter and have a hard time accepting "minute of Deer", when deep down we know that if we work at it..."minute of gnat's butt" is achievable.
 
Was shooting my rifle today and with each shot, fouling increased and the ramrod would not go quite as far down as it did with the shot before. Like one shot 1 the rammer would go all the way down. On shot 5 it would sit above the mark I made on the ramrod by about a halved inch.

Thoughts?
And what would be harder to measure was the very probable thickening of the residue attaching itself to the bore. Oddly, in your experiment you didn't notice it was getting harder to load.
Apparently your patched ball must have been tight enough to sweep all that residue into the breech creating the "ball creep " you speak of.
I wonder if you were able to continue would the breech fill to the extent that the spark from the ignition channel couldn't reach the powder?
None of this really matters as the only way to judge a load is WHAT KIND OF GROUPS ARE YOU GETTING?
DUTCH
 
And what would be harder to measure was the very probable thickening of the residue attaching itself to the bore. Oddly, in your experiment you didn't notice it was getting harder to load.
Apparently your patched ball must have been tight enough to sweep all that residue into the breech creating the "ball creep " you speak of.
I wonder if you were able to continue would the breech fill to the extent that the spark from the ignition channel couldn't reach the powder?
None of this really matters as the only way to judge a load is WHAT KIND OF GROUPS ARE YOU GETTING?
DUTCH
I think I have had two Dan Steels subscribe in the pst. One is a uniform wearing gentleman of California. A ranger of some variety and another in Florida/
If you don't write down absolutely everything when things are going right what will you do when suddenly things start going wrong. The deterioration means you changed something and going back to your notes of the good time will show you what change might have been.
My vision has kept me from any shooting but if I went back out there I would go as a newbie because all my notes, rifles and equipments are gone and my memory of those details is faint at best.
Dutch Schoultz
 
What the h** are you using for a patch lube? You should be having NO detectable change in fouling from one shot to the next. If you are, I suggest wiping between shots, but try wetter patches for a start. (I use just detergent in water. patches soaked at least over night; a stack of patch for the day is squeezed until I can barely get half a drop of water out. That's about right wetness. If they dry out while on the range, I give them a lick. 50+ shots with no wiping necessary. The only way I can think of to get your amount of fouling is via incomplete burning of the load. Are your patches very loose? (shooting unpatched balls will foul things within a couple of shots)
 
Mink's oil.
My advice would be to lose the oiled patches except perhaps, for hunting, when the gun may be left loaded for an extended period, or when it is extremely cold. A water based lube will dissolve fouling, carry it down to the load, and will shoot out with the next shot. You will only encounter one shot's worth of fouling. If (for whatever reason) some fouling does happen to build, load the round, then swab the bore with a wet cleaning patch. (by loading first, you avoid wetting the chamber)
 
My advice would be to lose the oiled patches except perhaps, for hunting, when the gun may be left loaded for an extended period, or when it is extremely cold. A water based lube will dissolve fouling, carry it down to the load, and will shoot out with the next shot. You will only encounter one shot's worth of fouling. If (for whatever reason) some fouling does happen to build, load the round, then swab the bore with a wet cleaning patch. (by loading first, you avoid wetting the chamber)

Thanks, sir! Yes I experimented with a spit’s patches last time at the range and it improved dramatically. Here in Las Vegas it’s very dry all year. In winter, it’s about -200% humidity constantly and it wreaks havoc on my skin!
 
A water based lube will dissolve fouling, carry it down to the load, and will shoot out with the next shot. You will only encounter one shot's worth of fouling.

A properly balanced minie ball load will do the same thing, but faster :)
 
THAT'S WHAT STUPID SCHOULTZ IS ON ABOUT ALL THE TIME. HE NEVER POINTS OUT THE CREEP THAT YOU SPEAK OFF BUT SUGGESTS THERE IS A THICKENING OF THE SAME RESIDUE ON THE SURDACE OF THE BORE ITSELF GIVING AN INCREASINGLY SMALLER BORE THUS AFFECTING ACCURACY.
TO ADD TO THAT NONSENSE HE ACTUALLY SPOUTS THAT ALL THAT MUCK MIGHT BE ELIMINATED BY A QUICK WIPE AFTER EACH OR MAYBE TWO SHOTS.
THERE IS DUMB AND CREATIVE DUMB
NEXT HE'LL BE YAMMERING ABOUT NOT PUTTING YOUR CIGARETTE AT REST BETWEEN DRAGS ON YOU CAN OF BLACK POWDER. WHY IS HE ALLOWED?

STUPID SCHOULTZ

PEOPLE INSIST THAT EACH SHOT PUTS MORE RESIDUAL manure IN THEIR BARRELS AND TELL US ALL ABOUT IT AND THEY ARE ALL PRETTY ACTIVE IN THEE DON'T WIPE BETWEEN SHOTS CROWD.. EARLIER TODAY SOMEONE WITH A BESS, A SMOOTHBORE HAD A BALL AND CARTRIDGE JAMMED HALF WAY DOWN THE BARREL. FAR BE IT FROM ME TO POINT OUT THE LACK OF LOGIC WHERE PEOPLE HAVE A PROBLEM THE CAUSE STARING THEM IN THE FACE AND THEY WILL NOT ADMIT THE SILLY WIPE BETWEEN SHOTS HAS OBVIOUS MERIT.
ALS!
DUTCH SCHOULTZ
 
Thanks all, using Track of the Wolf mink oil and Graf's 3Fg real BP, only 35grs in a .40 cal. Thinking my jag and patch are too tight and based on other recommendations, I'm going to try a wet spit patch and a tighter ball and patch combo. It's just so dry here, like -2% humidity. I'm thinking I need to introduce more moisture.
Did it not occur to you that grafs powder might be part of the problem. Its even cheaper than Goex which is hardly a premium powder. I have a pretty good idea what the stuff is assuming its made in the US. Don't shoot low grade powder and then complain about fouling. There was a reason back at the time of our Revolution that the riflemen wiped a lot. The powder was pretty poor by modern standards. You might also try blowing down the barrel. Something shooters have used for a very long time to ease loading problems. Some ranges require a blow tube for this. But it works very well in dry climates. I live in Montana and in summer our humidity goes below 20% unless its raining and sometimes single digits.
Water based lubes can cause their own issues and I don't use them anymore. Tallow, carefully made from, kidney fat (check a butcher shop) does a pretty good job of reducing fouling. PURE Neatsfoot oil works well also. There are others, all cheaper than the stuff you can buy as ready made patch lube. Beef fat boiled 3 times. Boil for 10 minute or so in a stock pot with a quart or two of water, let cool so the tallow solidifies, take the tallow tallow off the now cold water, you may need to cool this in a refridgerator in your climate to get is solidified, unless it gets pretty cool at night. Reboil the tallow with clean water twice more. The cool down takes longer than the cooking. After the third boil remove the solidified tallow and let air dry. I then heat in a double boiler and decant into jars or small tins. Rubbing one sides of the patch on the tallow usually will put enough on the patch to work well if a blow tub is used. The multiple boilings will remove anything that might cause corrosion. I left both barrels of my swivel breech loaded for several months after hunting season about 5 years ago then pulled the balls and there was no since of anything over than clean tallow. For really serious target work I use mix of water soluble cutting oil and water IIRC its 5 parts water to 2 parts WS oil. The patch material is wet with this, allowed to dry, the water will evaporate, leaving just enough oil to make material feel waxy or just very slightly oily. A high friction lube like this will often produce the best accuracy. But requires "heavily damp" patch, not dripping, wiping between shots then dried. Always done the same way everytime.
 
I may be a mite late to this "party", but what is this "ball creep" of which you speak?
Any "ball creep" off the powder charge, no matter how slight, creates a barrel obstruction.

In a single shot rifle or pistol, unless the ball and patch are way undersized and you point the muzzle down, the patched ball is not going to move. (same holds true for a side by side or over-under two shot. The recoil won't move the PRB or conical in the second barrel if loaded properly.)
If you load a C&B revolver properly, you shave a ring of lead off the ball when loading.
The ball is not going to move in any cylinder chamber except for the one you are firing,
 
I may be a mite late to this "party", but what is this "ball creep" of which you speak?
Any "ball creep" off the powder charge, no matter how slight, creates a barrel obstruction.

In a single shot rifle or pistol, unless the ball and patch are way undersized and you point the muzzle down, the patched ball is not going to move. (same holds true for a side by side or over-under two shot. The recoil won't move the PRB or conical in the second barrel if loaded properly.)
If you load a C&B revolver properly, you shave a ring of lead off the ball when loading.
The ball is not going to move in any cylinder chamber except for the one you are firing,
"Naked" conicals will move they have almost no friction in the bore, paper patch cylindrical bullets are a little better. PRB or the cloth patched picket bullets will not move.
 
To answer ugly old guy, What is "Ball Creep"? Lets return to the original post.

Was shooting my rifle today and with each shot, fouling increased and the ramrod would not go quite as far down as it did with the shot before. Like one shot 1 the rammer would go all the way down. On shot 5 it would sit above the mark I made on the ramrod by about a halved inch.

Thoughts?
In the original post, @Smokey Plainsman was talking about a fouling crust ring building up where the ball would rest on the powder. As the crust ring built up, the ball would not seat as deep as observed on previous loads. He too was concerned about moving off the powder charge and creating a barrel obstruction.

After 60 posts we have determined that it is important to deal with the fouling crust ring to allow us to load with the ball seated firmly on the powder. Most of us solve it by wiping with a damp patch which keeps the fouling soft and the crust wiped out of the bore. How to eliminate the crust ring is a balancing act of jag size, wiping patch thickness and cleaning material The fluff up is that we have different means to achieve the same result.

Use what works for you while avoiding pushing fouling into the breech and causing failures to fire.
 
Last edited:
Back
Top