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Hot Topic (More than 10 Replies) Breech seating vs ML as it relates to air gap (Read 1403 times)
toppkatt
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Breech seating vs ML as it relates to air gap
Mar 18th, 2025 at 5:52pm
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I'm going to be taking a ML instructor course but regarding the 'air gap' issue the course material seems fixated on 'NO AIR GAP' period (I get that if seated too far before powder it might act as an obstruction). Maybe it's just the lawyers speaking. Now I'm not so regimented as to believe everything I hear and feel, at times, there MIGHT be more than one way to do something. So rather than swallow hook, line and sinker the dogma in this course I'd like some practical, reasoned experience and observations.
When muzzle loading, all I ever hear is seat bullet down on powder. Now (and I know this is breech loading not ML) but powder, bullet remains the same...so why can you get away with 'air gap' in breech seating and I'm being told 'you'll blow up your gun' if done with a ML????
I know in certain types of BP mortars there is a air gap between ball and powder and there can be an air gap when breech seating. I'm just trying to find out the reasons for and against, before I flunk the final because I'm not parroting the ML dogma because I've heard of air gaps being used and with fine accuracy in Schutzen games because of the breech seating.
Sorry for the long question but I'm just trying to understand. BTW I've never done breech loading myself just what I've gleaned over the years and perhaps I'm completely misunderstanding something. 

THANKS!!!
« Last Edit: Mar 18th, 2025 at 6:38pm by toppkatt »  
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rgchristensen
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Re: Breech seating vs ML as it relates to air gap
Reply #1 - Mar 18th, 2025 at 6:43pm
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The “air gap” thing is a very real, well-understood phenomenon, which was discovered and documented over 100 years ago by Vieille, a Frenchman.    Some years ago, the late Charlie Dell did some damage to gun barrels to satisfy himself about it.

What happens is that when a symmetrical void is left in a barrel, the accelerating gases strike the stationary obstruction and cause a pressure spike which can reach pressures that will cause damage.

CHRIS
  
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marlinguy
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Re: Breech seating vs ML as it relates to air gap
Reply #2 - Mar 18th, 2025 at 7:54pm
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The vast majority of shooters who are breech seating are also shooting smokeless powders, which react differently to air gaps and wont cause a problem.
  

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rgchristensen
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Re: Breech seating vs ML as it relates to air gap
Reply #3 - Mar 18th, 2025 at 10:10pm
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marlinguy wrote on Mar 18th, 2025 at 7:54pm:
The vast majority of shooters who are breech seating are also shooting smokeless powders, which react differently to air gaps and wont cause a problem.


I wouldn’t count on it -- Sir Gerald Burrard describes the effect as it occurs in smokeless power shotgun loads.  It’s all one well-known phenomenon, BP or smokeless.  I believe that Charlie Dell’s experiments were all with smokeless propellants. 

CHRIS
  
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gunlaker
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Re: Breech seating vs ML as it relates to air gap
Reply #4 - Mar 18th, 2025 at 11:04pm
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rgchristensen wrote on Mar 18th, 2025 at 10:10pm:
I believe that Charlie Dell’s experiments were all with smokeless propellants. 

CHRIS


In his book he states that he was unable to ring a chamber with black powder, but that he could ring one on demand with smokeless.

There is obviously something going on with ringed muzzleloader barrels as it's not at all uncommon, but I've shot a lot of breech seated bullets with black powder using air gaps of up to 1/8" with no problems.  These were all with CM barrels though, not softer original barrels.

Chris.
  
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marlinguy
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Re: Breech seating vs ML as it relates to air gap
Reply #5 - Mar 19th, 2025 at 9:26am
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rgchristensen wrote on Mar 18th, 2025 at 10:10pm:
marlinguy wrote on Mar 18th, 2025 at 7:54pm:
The vast majority of shooters who are breech seating are also shooting smokeless powders, which react differently to air gaps and wont cause a problem.


I wouldn’t count on it -- Sir Gerald Burrard describes the effect as it occurs in smokeless power shotgun loads.  It’s all one well-known phenomenon, BP or smokeless.  I believe that Charlie Dell’s experiments were all with smokeless propellants. 

CHRIS


I'd have to re-read Charlie's experiments again, but if I recall he was ringing chambers with smokeless by using a wad over powder when he breech seated. So his attempts to ring chambers were based on using wads, not just breech seating with air gaps between cases and bullets.
Every smokeless load has air gaps whether the bullet is breech seated or fixed bullets. More air gap lowers pressures, but no reason it would cause a bulge in the chamber. At least I've never heard of that without a wad added to the powder.
  

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oneatatime
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Re: Breech seating vs ML as it relates to air gap
Reply #6 - Mar 19th, 2025 at 9:49am
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Vall, Charlie was able to ring a chamber with no wad just by shooting straight up in the air. The problem is caused by a powder surface parallel to the bullet's base whether caused by a wad on top of the powder (touching) or gravity holding the powder's surface level and parallel to the bullet's base. An overpowder wad is fine as long as it is slightly separated from the powder so that the powder can slump a bit. There must be some separation distance between the powder surface and the bullet's base more than when just the 1/16 or 1/8 from breech loading. It became apparent in smokeless charges that left considerable separation in cases originally designed for black powder. The effect of pressure build up is what makes shaped charges in antitank loads work. Naturally it is more serious in our old original barrels than new high strength steel ones but even those can have a ring build up through repeated loads. Why take a chance? Leave a bit of space between smokeless powder and an over powder wad (or wadding).
  
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marlinguy
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Re: Breech seating vs ML as it relates to air gap
Reply #7 - Mar 19th, 2025 at 11:08am
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oneatatime wrote on Mar 19th, 2025 at 9:49am:
Vall, Charlie was able to ring a chamber with no wad just by shooting straight up in the air. The problem is caused by a powder surface parallel to the bullet's base whether caused by a wad on top of the powder (touching) or gravity holding the powder's surface level and parallel to the bullet's base. An overpowder wad is fine as long as it is slightly separated from the powder so that the powder can slump a bit. There must be some separation distance between the powder surface and the bullet's base more than when just the 1/16 or 1/8 from breech loading. It became apparent in smokeless charges that left considerable separation in cases originally designed for black powder. The effect of pressure build up is what makes shaped charges in antitank loads work. Naturally it is more serious in our old original barrels than new high strength steel ones but even those can have a ring build up through repeated loads. Why take a chance? Leave a bit of space between smokeless powder and an over powder wad (or wadding).


Well I've never pointed my barrel straight up before firing with smokeless, but I shoot almost exclusively smokeless powder loads in my old 1800's rifles for many decades now without any chambers bulged. Not sure any of my smokeless loads are over 50% fill in cases, so a fair amount of air space inside.
When shooting breech seated the space is of course even larger, and I don't use a wad or card at the case mouth there either. I simply drop a charge in the case and chamber it behind the bullet.
Maybe I'm just lucky?
  

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gnoahhh
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Re: Breech seating vs ML as it relates to air gap
Reply #8 - Mar 19th, 2025 at 11:38am
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Speaking hypothetically, in terms of muzzle-breech seating with blackpowder, since shooting with a case full of powder is de rigeur why not seat the bullet so it bears firmly against the powder charge with a wad on top of it? I'm envisioning a full-to-the-brim charge of black with, say, an 1/8" greased felt wad smushed on top of it with a skinch left protruding, the whole works squeezed into the chamber to bear against the previously muzzle loaded bullet?
  
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Re: Breech seating vs ML as it relates to air gap
Reply #9 - Mar 19th, 2025 at 12:37pm
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gnoahhh
An additional consideration for loading a breech-muzzle loaded rifle. When a bullet is muzzle loaded (say groove diameter or slightly more) it pushes fouling from prior shot down the barrel. The accumulated fouling and lube accumulates as illustrated below. If you allow about 1/16" between the bullet base and case mouth when rammed down barrel, the small void accommodates that little glob of fouling & lube.
I've been shooting my Ballard .38-50 Rem-Hep, muzzle loaded, for years now with black and duplex loads - no ringed chamber. Smiley
With the right bullet lube, you can shoot dirty all day long with black or duplex loads and maintain accuracy.
  

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Re: Breech seating vs ML as it relates to air gap
Reply #10 - Mar 19th, 2025 at 12:43pm
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Untold tens of thousands, or hundreds of thousands of commercial black powder gallery loads, and the same too for arsenal black powder practice loads were made and shot in the era. These rounds had very small charges of BP in full sized cases. 

Indeed the current Black Powder Cartridge News has a piece called Vintage Revolver Roundball Gallery and Midrange loads that has historical loading data for many of the old revolver calibers, listing small charges of BP. 

The issue of short seated ML's by a few inches or more must be a different dynamic than the less than 100% full cartridges. It is all above my pay grade.   
« Last Edit: Mar 19th, 2025 at 6:28pm by CW »  
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oneatatime
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Re: Breech seating vs ML as it relates to air gap
Reply #11 - Mar 19th, 2025 at 6:01pm
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The problem is not pressure but the highly directed shockwave formed on the surface of the burning powder. With the powder surface parallel to the bullet's base the shockwave runs unimpeded down the length of the case and piles up on the base of the bullet and expends its energy sideways onto the chamber wall. If the top of the powder surface is not perpendicular to the length of the case/bullet base multiple shockwaves form and impede each other. One writer versed in explosives noted that at a pressure of only 10 atmospheres a shockwave can be generated that will shatter concrete.
  
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Re: Breech seating vs ML as it relates to air gap
Reply #12 - Mar 19th, 2025 at 6:41pm
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how much concrete? thirty horsepower can probably get you and your car up to two hundred miles an hour. If you don't take the food and water you need to survive while it is getting there.
  
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Re: Breech seating vs ML as it relates to air gap
Reply #13 - Mar 19th, 2025 at 8:27pm
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I'm not too much up on the science behind chamber ringing, but I'm going on observations I've made after basically a working lifetime in the antique gun business. I'm retired now, and still not getting my own projects done!

I will never use partial fill nitro powder loads in any antique rifle. I have seen more ringed chambers than I ever want to. Wads, kapok, Dacron, foam, nothing, you name it - I've seen rifles ringed by the above methods.

If it was made to shoot black, shoot black.
  
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marlinguy
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Re: Breech seating vs ML as it relates to air gap
Reply #14 - Mar 20th, 2025 at 11:55am
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curdog wrote on Mar 19th, 2025 at 8:27pm:
I'm not too much up on the science behind chamber ringing, but I'm going on observations I've made after basically a working lifetime in the antique gun business. I'm retired now, and still not getting my own projects done!

I will never use partial fill nitro powder loads in any antique rifle. I have seen more ringed chambers than I ever want to. Wads, kapok, Dacron, foam, nothing, you name it - I've seen rifles ringed by the above methods.

If it was made to shoot black, shoot black.


There are smokeless powders out there that operate at black powder velocities and do so at lower chamber pressures than BP does.
  

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