feather,
Iconoclast? Nah! A little weird maybe.
You bring up some very interesting points about hard vs soft lube. If you wipe between shots then I see your point, as I do the same thing when shooting bench in Schuetzen, and there's no need for a lube to keep the fouling soft.
What's your routine for wiping out?
A friend pushes a bore pig thru with a cleaning rod and attaches a dry patch to follow right behind. Steve Garbe was telling me a while ago that he's trying out using a the blow tube followed by a dry patch. Claims this works real well as the bore condition doesn't change if he has to wait a shot out. Since I'm kinda new at this Shilouette shooting I'm just using the blow tube for know. I tried Steve's idea but didn't see any accuracy improvement over just using a blow tube. Of course atmospheric conditions here In Iowa are a lot different than in Wyoming. What I did find using Steve's method was that when the humidity was over 50% you didn't need to use the blow tube. Under that you did or it was about impossible to push a patch thru.
Types of lube
I can see your idea of using a hard lube in order to give support to the bullet. But, wouldn't a harder alloy do the same?
I've always used a soft lube for all my shooting. Black or smokeless, and I've even used Alox/Beeswax for shooting BP with decent results. As the buddy who taught me says....."if it ain't soft it ain't lube!". I've just followed his example.
The one thing I have found tho is that you can have to much lube on your bullet to. A .45/70 I used to have would shoot a whole lot better if I left the lube out of the top two grooves in a Lyman 457125. Most bullets I shoot anymore I leave the top groove bare. Seems to cut down on those unexpected "flyers".
I'm not sure why a bullet runs out of lube. Not much can be being applied to the bore due to the time spent in the bore. When you fire a bullet past a chronograph it gets splattered with a lot of lube. I've even made up a "splash" shield to catch most of it.
Question for you on this lube "application to the bore". Do you feel that the lube is applied by centrifugal force, or by the compressive force exerted by the pressure behind the bullet? I have my opinion but as another thread on here suggests one of the "Experts" says different.
Some of my experience with soft lubes and whether they allow collapse of the grooves as vs hard lubes...... I swage cast groove bullets that are filled with SPG before doing it. Mostly to to true them up, and I haven't found the grooves collapsed to any extent I can tell. In fact truing them up will give a good 1/3rd to 1/2 reduction in group size. Granted that this might be an apple/orange situation since no lube is lost from the grooves as it's applied to the barrel on firing. But, this also brings up the idea that as a hard lube is applied to the barrel the space in the groove would collapse. So, in any event we have to use an alloy that resists deformation whether we use a hard or soft lube.
Your thinking?
Yeah! I remember your telling me about you using PP bullets for Shilouette shooting. Refresh my memory about that? I can get reasonable accuracy from them but never thought of them as having target quality accuracy as vs GG bullets.
PETE