Kees, I have never used it in a paste form, but I intend to to do that this weekend.
Still yet, I am a long time user of Ed's Red and I have used it 'straight' as a patch lube.
I put a layer of patches in a old beat up can of Griffith's Shoe Polish, the one with the little lever on the side for opening the can, and I add a bit of Ed's Red, then the next day or whenever, I add more patches and more Ed's Red....you can easily get 100 or more patches in the can with no problem.
After these patches are soaked, I squeeze out any excess, to where they almost feel dry, and you're ready to go.
The funny part, or good part you might say, is the fact those patches remain damp forever in that can...not wet, but damp.
Ed's Red has never found the recognition and respect it so rightly deserves amongst us Muzzleloaders.
Most Muzzleloaders will look at the ingredients / composition and think it is "to much for to little" with all the other Bore Cleaners available, why go to the time and trouble?
I fully understand that.
Many of the old-timers from the 1960's and 70's, especially those that had been using it, for years with slight modifications, knew it's value and passed it on.
Back in the 1970's, when Muzzleloading was first becoming popular, after many hunters and shooters had been 'burnt-out' from all the Magnum. Smagnum, shoot through 3 Zip Codes modern rifles & cartridges, they turned to Muzzle Loading.
Plus, the Bicentennial came along, and the craze started.
Unfortunately, at that same time, there was a lot of 'old wives tales' and flat-out misinformation by the self appointed Subject Matter Experts, that was passed along as gospel.
Also, there was no Internet, and any written material on the subject was often tainted by the Author's own view and ideas on the subject, while Ned Roberts book on The Muzzleloading Caplock Rifle was scarce as Hen's Teeth....The local Libraries may or may not have had a copy, and it always seemed to be checked out. (I didn't get my own copy until about 195)
Those same Subject Matter Experts also dictated what you would use to clean the bore of your rifle, and Ed's Red was never a part of this, and still to this day, receives very little press.
Thanks for sharing this with the group.
It is indeed good stuff, albeit a bit expensive on your 1st batch.
That same "batch" will last a shooter a long, long time.
Uncle Russ...