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Hobbies & Interests
Hunting & Fishing
Muzzle Loader Question - Blackhorn powder
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<blockquote data-quote="retrieverman" data-source="post: 4347541" data-attributes="member: 24452"><p>Ok, I figured that. To know how much you’re actually shooting, multiply the volume by .7, and that should be the actual weight. Your 90 grains by volume should be 63 grains by weight, and even if it’s 98, that’s still only a little over 68 grains. Neither is a dangerous load.</p><p>I’d definitely recommend buying a scale if nothing else to test a few tubes to make sure they’re marked right.</p><p></p><p>I’m an oddball when it comes to powder measuring, because I use Lee dippers with all my rifle and pistol handloads (I do verify on a scale every few loads). Yet, I scale measure every single charge for my muzzleloaders. <img src="/images/smilies/anyone.gif" class="smilie" loading="lazy" alt=":anyone:" title="Anyone :anyone:" data-shortname=":anyone:" /></p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="retrieverman, post: 4347541, member: 24452"] Ok, I figured that. To know how much you’re actually shooting, multiply the volume by .7, and that should be the actual weight. Your 90 grains by volume should be 63 grains by weight, and even if it’s 98, that’s still only a little over 68 grains. Neither is a dangerous load. I’d definitely recommend buying a scale if nothing else to test a few tubes to make sure they’re marked right. I’m an oddball when it comes to powder measuring, because I use Lee dippers with all my rifle and pistol handloads (I do verify on a scale every few loads). Yet, I scale measure every single charge for my muzzleloaders. :anyone: [/QUOTE]
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