Kudos to marlinguy for letting us know a while back about the great clearance sale @ Nosler for 9.3X74R brass to use for making 40-90 brass for the old Ballards. I finally got the *@#* combination sorted out so I could open my gun safe, and now I have access once again to my good old Ballard Pacific. From flea-Bay I got a #13 priming chamber for my 310 tool, and a while back friend Dale53 had a clearance sale on his unused GOEX BP. I'm figuring I now have everything I need to fire form some brass and start shooting this bad boy I won at auction back in 2004!
My plan is to prime the cases with standard WLR primers and add some amount of BP, then fill the case the rest of the way with either corn meal or cream of wheat, capping it all off with a single wadded up sheet of toilet paper. My question is to those who have used BP for fire forming large cases is, "How much BP should I use?" With this old Ballard that I have never shot, I have absolutely
NO plans to use any kind of smokeless in it until I have gotten properly formed brass and can start developing
very mild loads.
By way of explanation, this Pacific is a put-together gun from the estate auction of an old gunsmith friend from the mountains of VA. The barrel and fore end have matching numbers, then everything else with numbers has a second matching set of numbers. The bore is not primo by any stretch but I think it will polish out to be a decent shooter. I currently own 3 Darr bullet moulds in 40 cal, so I'm hoping I can either make a light bullet Express load for it, or go the other way and make some ground stomping heavy bullet buffalo loads... likely with BP at least to start with.
As always, TIA for any and all help and information you may provide. Now if the Spring Floods would just recede! Does anybody have a dove I can send out to look for dry land??
Regards,
Froggie