feather,
Barrel length might pose a problem with the amount of lube needed, and the CBA shooters do tend to have short barrels in comparison to Schuetzen, and the even longer barrels in BP Shooting.
As I've mentioned before tho I have found that certain bullets can use less lube and even increase accuracy.
For BP shooting the Lyman 457125 comes to mind in the .45/70. In my .50/90 tho I have to fill all the grooves as any less degrades accuracy. I sometimes wonder if even more lube would be better.
For smokeless offhand shooting I use an old Win. mould that has very deep, wide grooves, and best accuracy is gotten leaving one groove empty. But my "standard" breech seating bullet is a copy of a Barnett bullet which has narrow, shallow grooves and needs them all filled.
My thinking is maybe while testing hard against soft lubes we should also see how each of those works with less lube in the grooves.
I'm with you about using a cookie. I've never felt it was necessary even when shooting the NCOWS Buffalo Match. I think most of the comments come from PP shooters and people who live where the humidity is low. Here In Iowa we usually have plenty of it, and as I've found using Steve Garbe's method of the blow tube and a dry patch, over 50% and you can leave the blow tube out of the routine.
Like you to I think adding things to a load just means something more you have to account for. My theory is the less parts you've got in a load the better. In fact, before I knew better(?) I didn't put a wad behind the bullet in my .40/50SS load. Shot just fine as far as I was concerned using just the barrel sights.
Martini,
Had forgotten about Dan T.'s grooveless bullets and his White Lightning lube. Very good point as is the one the guy who mentions now and again in the CBA's magazine that he shoots bullets with no lube at all in the 2400 fps range. Nobody publicly tells him he's full of it so there might be something to it. I've just never worked up the courage to try it.
When first starting in Schuetzen shooting I "mined" enuf Lead to last a lifetime.
PETE