There you go, there's always an exception. I guess if your really concerned with movement and moving around a lot, just stop occasionally and check the seating with your ram rod. Then you'll know.Yes. Yes, they do move. My last mountain deer hunt a couple years back I was using my Lyman .50 GPH with home poured 370gr Maxi’s. Time came to unload at days end and I discharged my load. No recoil, weird pop and no hole in the target. I believe the cold weather (-27c) shrunk the maxi and it fell out, along with most of the charge.
I’d hunted with this loads lots previously and was very disciplined about checking for movement with none ever showing up. Every previous hunt was in much warmer weather however.
Walk
Short answer, conicals, both Minie and flat base, have moved on me. Until you have proven different to yourself, assume they will move off the powder.I hunt with my 1861 2 band rifle loaded with 70 grs 3f and I've wondered if the minnie will move away from the powder after carrying it around all day.
Anyone think its a good idea to put a card on top of the bullet?
I can't say a Minie does but I wouldn't doubt it as they fit the bore the same as a Maxie and I once ringed a barrel from one that worked forward after a day of carry muzzle angled downward. I guess if you checked it periodically with the loading rod you'd be OK.I hunt with my 1861 2 band rifle loaded with 70 grs 3f and I've wondered if the minnie will move away from the powder after carrying it around all day.
Anyone think its a good idea to put a card on top of the bullet?
Just shooting from the hip here, but maybe a dry patched jag?What would keep a ram rod / wiping stick in the bore to keep it from falling out?
Depends on the size of the bore and the size of the minie. I shot with the North South Skirmish Association for many years. We shot minies in mukset competition. If a minie is way undersized they can slide down the bore without a rammer. What you want to do is mic the bore then mould a minie that is as close yo the bore size as possible. Finally run them through a sizing die. Moose Moulds are good. Check out the NSSA forumm for more info. I would not use a wad on top of a minie. And, always carry muzzle up, at shoulder arms or trail arms.I hunt with my 1861 2 band rifle loaded with 70 grs 3f and I've wondered if the minnie will move away from the powder after carrying it around all day.
Anyone think its a good idea to put a card on top of the bullet?
Exactly. The minie ball diamteter must be wide enough to hold the round in the rifling but still go down the bore easily when loading. The whole purpose of the minie ball was to make loading faster and easier but not to have the round slide back out the barrel. As my firend found out over the counter rounds may be slightly off diameter wise or the a combination of bore diameter and round diameter may not match up. Could get a rifle with a bore that it a little oversize and a round that is a little undersize and now you have a round that rattles down the bore and will not stay seated against the powder. Have to do some experimentation with different rounds to get one that fits right.In my humble opinion, I think that the key to this question is bullet diameter in relation to bore diameter as mentioned above. Slight variance that adds up to a bullet a bit small for bore certainly seems possible with variances between rifle barrel brands and the various bullet brands/molds. This is also evident in cartridge rifles, particularly older antiques where this issue mainly leads to poor accuracy and leading. Shooters of antique hyphenated cartridge rifles looking for good performance will slug their barrels and buy/mold their bullets to match the barrel bore.
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