This is for information stating what I found on my barrel today.
I have never heard, or read, of an incident with a Green Mountain Barrel, so what I'm reporting may be old hat to may of our shooters.
Others may find it helpful.
I was tinkering around with a 1" Green Mountain 1:26 Twist .50 cal today when I decided to run my Bore Scope down and take a little look-see.
WOW! What I found down there was totally unexpected.
Instead of a small chamber, like that on the T/C, I found something that made me stop and think.....and wonder.
I cleaned the chamber well, took a clean patch on a brass .30 cal brush, and loaded it up with "Dykem Blue".
I smeared that Dykem Blue on, in, and all around the Ante-chamber.
I then took a new clean patch and got it to the very bottom of the Ante-Chamber, then wiggled it around to get the diameter of that chamber....when I pulled it and measured it that puppy was 0..68 deep!
The best diameter measurement I could get with a clean patch was right at 0.450"....
Now here's the thing......
Remember what Rod said about a similar off-shore anti-chamber and reduced loads?
I honestly think I could put at least 40 to 45 gr FFFg in that chamber, in fact I have sometimes thought about doing that very same thing in the past.
This particular Fast Twist shoots a PRB quite well with 65gr FFFg Goex.....My paper-patch load is 110gr FFFg, and I can ring the 150 yd, 18", Saw-Blade "Gonger", with monotonous regularity from the bench.
Off hand I shoot a fairly steady 60% on a good day, less when I'm just not on.
I've been thinking about shooting reduced loads with PRB, but what I found today scares me to think there could be a .25 to .50" inch
gap between the seated ball and the powder.
Fast Twist barrels are designed to be shot with heavy loads using a conical bullet....and quite likely the base of that projectile will be flat, which means the bullet
can not go down below the radius "cone" of the anti-chamber.
And that brings me to this........
I sure as heck don't want to yell Wolf, or start some silly scare.
But, even more importantly, I do want folks to know what's down there in their gun, and the possibility, that when using seriously reduced loads, something possibly could go south on you in a heartbeat....to me it stands to reason. To others maybe not so much.
I would just prefer that everyone is safe, and knows they're safe, when shooting hooked breach muzzleloaders.
Look at the depth of this anti-chamber!
Uncle Russ....