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How did the last wet patch and the dry patch look? Any color beyond a light gray increases the chance of a flyer, IME. I found that “formulas,” ie, two wets and a dry, two wets, pushed almost through, pulled back and pushed again, and two drys, etc, would eventually get me an “out.” The barrel can look pretty shiny and still have enough powder fouling in it to throw wild ones. I used to use two halves of a large patch, cut in two, each half wetted and folded over so four sides could be used, then another half, dry, two sides used. The first patch would be tossed, the second wet patch used for the first one for the next shot, the dry one wetted and used for the second wet one, and a new half for the new dry one. The bore looked like all it needed was oiling to be put away, and the dry patch showed only a slight gray streaking at the very worst. It was a lot of work for a little shooting, but those loads I’d so laboriously put together shot on their own merits, without yet another variable to derange the results. Once you get a load that definitely shows promise (like your second one, maybe, but I’d try more powder, myself), then you can see what you can get away with switching to wiping formulas. A lot of people who use formulas in target shooting clean their guns thoroughly between relays, so their procedures work for ten or fifteen shots, but they take no chances pushing things indefinitely. Or, you can make or get some bore pigs, which carry enough water and are long enough and abrasive enough to loosen the fouling in one slow push through the barrel. A full-size dry patch following the bore pig basically does the work of the eight wet passes and two drys.
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