That's great news, FNQ22

I bought a rotary tumbler last year to clean my blackpowder brass as the brass is so discoloured that you can't easily find it in the gravel and grass. I tried it initially with the stainless balls that were included. First dry, then with water, and both were poor results. Then I tried stainless pins dry, and wet, and wet with dishwashing liquid. Results were better, but still not great. And all of them were very noisy, for many hours - it was like spending a day sitting beside a waterfall, and I definitely couldn't run it at night. One of the guys at the club gave me some walnut media so I tried that dry. Still wasn't impressed. I might try the pins with the citric acid one day.
So I bought the ten-liter ultrasonic bath, which easily holds 400 .44-40's - if I filled it right up it would probably do more than 500, so would go close to 1000 9mm. I tried it just with cold water and it didn't do much at all. Then I turned the heat up to 50C, and it did a little better. Then I turned it up to 75C, which was a little better again. Then I added a tablespoon of powdered citric acid, at 50C, and that made a noticeable difference. I worked up to 75C with two tablespoons of acid. Within perhaps three minutes of turning it on the water is too dark to see any of the brass. It did the best job so far, though most of the brass still has some discolouration. After the state titles I'll have a pile of brass to clean again so I want to add some dishwashing liquid as well this time. Probably the best bit is it's so quiet that I can barely hear it when I'm standing over it, from the next room it's silent, until the beep goes off.
Yesterday I shot a match with the last of the primed brass that I dropped into the water. I had five stop in the bore, out of 41rds, but still managed my highest score so far with the .44-40 Single-Action Army

Out of the 130rds I only had one actual dud primer, 13 stopped in the bore, most just into the throat and three at the muzzle. I was able to punch one bullet out, reassemble the pistol and complete the string on the clock. I couldn't recover the unburned powder for examination as it just fell out of the bore and chamber when I dropped the cylinder out of the gun to clear it. I had about 15 I think that barely left the muzzle. I had at least two bullets that bounced off the coreflute target backing, one barely split the paper target. I guess about 75% of them were unaffected by the immersion. Hopefully I don't make that mistake again

I chronongraphed the hot .44-40's, one was right on 1000fps, one hit 1020fps, and they averaged 958fps, which is too close to the 1000fps max. Shooting steel plates three meters in front of you, ten times in maybe six seconds it felt like the whole world was vibrating around me, way too much muzzle blast for that. The max allowed for Cowboy is 1000fps for the pistols and pistol-caliber rifle. The long-range rifles can go to 1400fps. I would expect these to add another 200fps in the rifle.
I also chronographed the S&B .357 158gn LRN factory load in my six-inch Model 19 - 1142fps with a high of 1216, so no good for Cowboy.
I'm loading a pile of blackpowder for this weekend so I tried the quickest load, filling the case with black and seating the bullet on top. I filled the case to about 2mm from the top, giving me 35.5gn of FFFg (a heaped 2.2cc dipper) still with some compression. In the rifle they averaged 1172fps, with a high of 1235fps, so definitely way too hot. So I dropped it to 21.5gn of FFFg (a heaped 1.3cc dipper) with 11gn of polenta on top (a heaped 1cc dipper). I tried chronoing these, but in the atrocious weather we had I only got one measurement, of 6908fps, which I guess was a Mach-6 grain of polenta

It's very time-consuming making blackpowder loads.
I had a GA on Thursday to put a camera down my throat. I usually don't much like GA's but they improve the drugs every year and this one was amazing. They were still making me comfy on the bed when they switched me off with no warning. I opened my eyes from a lovely dream (that I couldn't remember) to a pretty Asian girl who had been sat there to watch me come out. I felt absolutely fine as soon as I woke, though it took about fifteen minutes for my eyes to focus properly. Rose picked me up a few minutes later and we went to the pistol club to move some target frames before we went home where I ate everything I could find. I woke up at 0300 with some reflux, but that could've simply been due to all the grub I stashed down there rather than the procedure. Put a slice of bread in there to settle it, sat up for an hour and went back to bed. Only twelve years ago I had a GA that took more than an hour to come out of and bothered me for days, before that they were even more rugged. Incredible progress.
fnq22 wrote:Ok so I had a win yesterday..
3.7gn APS 350 , 125 gn Black widow OAL 1.130 did the trick..
I also cleaned and lubed the gun up real well and shot through a box of factory ammo first then a box of the reloads with zero malfunctions..
and now I have a scale which seems very accurate and consistent so I loaded up another hundred weighing each one for now just to maintain that consistency.
Didn't bother with the chrono for now though I'm sure they were faster then 26 fps..lol..Next trip I'll do a bit of accuracy testing at 50 and 75 yards..
and whats the go with ultrasonic cleaners..I'm just using a Hornady tumbler with corn media and find the shells come up clean and shiny although it probably doesn't clean the primer pocket as much as you would want..
I didn't think about your climate challenges there regarding fans but we can turn them down if needed which is never up here...you definitely need some type of breeze from behind to clear the air in the pistol bays I reckon though..