Cap & Ball Paper Cartridges

Deltadart

New member
Here is an idea for those that like paper cartridges for cap and ball revolvers. I may be the last person on earth to figure this out, but I saw one included with a cartridge making kit. Paper cartridge making moves at the speed of a glacier, so anything that speeds it up is good. I used a small piece of hickory wood, and a toggle clamp. Made the template also from hickory, by gluing a paper drawing onto the small piece of wood and sanding to match. Now I can cut 5 layers of nitrated coffee filters in seconds with the Xacto knife, no more tracing and cutting. It helps to staple the layers of filters together
 

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Deltadart

New member
Paper cartridges do speed things up some at the shooting table. However, you do spend a fair amount of time making the cartridges. I load .38s and 45s on a Dillion 550 so the time difference in producing 100 loaded rounds is amazing. I have tried the cigarette paper, hair curling paper, and coffee filters. The coffee filters are the only ones I have added KNO3 to aid combustion. That does pretty well, but still I have found paper residue in the chambers after shooting. I suggest you have brush or patch worm with you and run that thru each chamber after firing to ensure there is no residue left in the chambers that would cause a miss fire on the next round. Only takes a few seconds to do. If you have a revolver loading stand and use loose ball and powder you may find that nearly as fast as the cartridges, certainly when you consider the time spent preparing cartridges.
 

Hellgate

New member
I always had a pair of tweezers to remove residual paper from a chamber. I found I got more reliable ignition if I punched the flash hole with a nipple pick before capping.
 

44 Dave

New member
I make .44, .36 and .31 using curling paper. I trace the tube pattern on one sheet then staple a stack of 10-15 together then cut with scissors holding each bunch with a little squeeze paper clip.
The balance of the stapled pack gets punched for bottoms.
When I first started paper cartridges I used treated coffee filters but now use un-treated curling papers.
 

Deltadart

New member
Dave, I too use the perm papers. They speed the operation up as no KNO3 is required and they seem to burn up pretty well, although I do find some residue in the chambers from time to time. With this hold down clamp I take 5 sheets, fold them over, clamp and cut with the xacto knife. This is easy to do and I have 10 ready to go in a few seconds. Xacto needs to be razor sharp. Did not take long to cut up a pile tonight in short order. The perm paper does not seem to be as durable as the coffee filter paper, but I am not subjecting them to much rough handling. I was using filer paper due having a large surplus of them (long story).
 
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