"..........and that alone is worthy of better accuracy, believe it or not."
FWIW: Confidence is everything to this old boy!
Years ago, when trying to master the art of Flintlock shooting, I was indeed my own worst enemy once a "misfire" took place.
Although I fully realized what had just happened, my scores went south for the day, and there was darn little I could do to improve after that.
Fortunately, for whatever reason, that no longer happens....I will still on a rare occasion get a pan flash, but it's so rare it does not upset my mental makeup, it just happens and I move on from there with mext shot breaking right where I call it....that comes from confidence in my opinion.
Can't say I clean any different, or do any tut hing else differently, it just seldom happens anymore. My Flintlocks are all over 20 years old, been fired hundreds if not thousands of times, with a misfire being the last thing on my mind.
I suspect all the shooting over the years gives me the confidence to concentrate on only where that ball is going, and not if the gun is going to shoot.
I've cleaned my guns with about everything available on the market that is listed as BP Bore Cleaner, and I have also used just plain old water.
If one should work that much better than the othe other I've never been astute enough to see that difference.
A "proper" cleaning to me means removing all traces of Black Powder, proper drying as in multiple wiping with a clean dry patch, and insuring a good coat of oil is applied to protect the gun and the work you just did. That final coat of oil can be anything of your choosing that going to protect the gun against rust, your real enemy when shooting Black Powder.
My old stand by this last and final chore is a very lite coat of -3 In 1-oil, it has been around forever and it still works like a charm.
Many of the newer oils, ie, RemOil works every bit as good, and it all results in a sure-fire, gun that goes boom every time, and that builds confidence.
Uncle Russ...