Re: 42 Springfields
Any slight moisture from temp change would not (by itself) be sufficient to cause the problem you are describing. What is most likely happening is that the fouling crud that has not been swabbed out is hardening in the bolster and clogging the flash channel. Those first few caps you pop aren't drying it out, but rather blasting the crud loose and re-opening the flash channel so it can be receptive to the charge. A cook-off (actually coke-off) is when burning embers of residual BP crud left in the barrel inadvertendly set off the charge when it is poured down the barrel. Very dangerous situation. A loaded round fired via a priming charge (from your cap) is not cooked off.
You hint at it when you noted that the 1842 can be more difficult to clean. This is not a design problem of the reproduction but rather a factor of the larger BP charge that goes down the barrel. The .58 rifle muskets usually take 60 gr loads, and the .69 around 80 gr. 25% more BP = 25% more fouling.Suggest you field clean your weapon before bedding down, or clean it better than you have been. If you can't field clean the barrel, then at least take the cone out and re-establish the flash channel with your vent pick.
Any slight moisture from temp change would not (by itself) be sufficient to cause the problem you are describing. What is most likely happening is that the fouling crud that has not been swabbed out is hardening in the bolster and clogging the flash channel. Those first few caps you pop aren't drying it out, but rather blasting the crud loose and re-opening the flash channel so it can be receptive to the charge. A cook-off (actually coke-off) is when burning embers of residual BP crud left in the barrel inadvertendly set off the charge when it is poured down the barrel. Very dangerous situation. A loaded round fired via a priming charge (from your cap) is not cooked off.
You hint at it when you noted that the 1842 can be more difficult to clean. This is not a design problem of the reproduction but rather a factor of the larger BP charge that goes down the barrel. The .58 rifle muskets usually take 60 gr loads, and the .69 around 80 gr. 25% more BP = 25% more fouling.Suggest you field clean your weapon before bedding down, or clean it better than you have been. If you can't field clean the barrel, then at least take the cone out and re-establish the flash channel with your vent pick.
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