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armednfree
10-20-2018, 08:52 AM
I brought a Bible home from work. A bunch of the paper in it was torn out, likely used to roll cigarettes and joints by the inmates. I pulled it from the trash as the chapel threw it away. It is made of what is called scritta paper. From what I've read that is a wood free uncoated paper made from cotton and linen.

Can that be used to paper patch bullets? I've never done this before other than trying regular notebook paper which does not seem to work.

Dan Cash
10-20-2018, 09:01 AM
Not tried it my self but have surely thought about it. The paper has a good feel to it and is tough. Determine the proper bullet diameter and try it; report on results. I have a large print, paper bound Bible that left out about 400 pages during printing. I believe it is printed on scritta and I may try it for patching.

John McCorkle
10-20-2018, 10:27 AM
Warewolf and vampire killing rounds too...

Sent from my Moto G Play using Tapatalk

toallmy
10-20-2018, 10:36 AM
Paper patching intrigues me , but I'm not there yet I'm still working on grease and gas checks out of a couple rifles . Good luck with your experiment .

armednfree
10-20-2018, 10:58 AM
The problem I had with the other paper was twisting the tail. I used this paper and that went fine. The paper measured .0014 so I took three turns on a 300 grain lee .453. I have not opened up my Lee sizer so it is still .457.

These are just my initial tries, depending on results I then go to refinement like the sizer die and alloy.

I figure if it works that same bullet cast with 1/20 should flatten out like a half dollar on a deer.


I did notice that my dog didn't come down as usual. HMM..........

Dan Cash
10-20-2018, 01:28 PM
I would size that bullet to .448 or .449 and apply 2 wraps of this scritta paper. If you lick the patch before applying it, it will wrap tight and no need to size after patching. May not even need any sizing if patched dry. I find sizing the patched bullet tears the patch, deforms the bullet and is a pain.

country gent
10-20-2018, 10:59 PM
A lot no longer wrap with the tail wound under the bullet. leave 3/16" over hang on base and wrap bullet then fold base under it should leave a small bit of the bullets base showing in the center and a much flatter base to work with. I get better release with this wrapping than the til and the ball on the base dosnt damage the base when fired

armednfree
10-20-2018, 11:20 PM
I just cut the tails off and sized them after applying a small amount of case lube. They look perfect. Shooting will tell. Education in process. By the way, 4 inches at 100 yards is acceptable. I only worry about a rifle being as accurate as it needs to be, not necessarily as accurate as it can be.

I'm going to throttle these up right off the rip. 66 grains H335. If it can't handle those speeds then I probably will abandon it.

Dan Cash
10-21-2018, 11:12 AM
I'm going to throttle these up right off the rip. 66 grains H335. If it can't handle those speeds then I probably will abandon it.

Holy scritta, bullet man! What are you shooting, .458 Win? I only use full throttle loads but yours says OUCH!!!

Dan Cash
10-21-2018, 02:16 PM
I would suggest you aim for a max of 1500-1600 fps with that bullet in your 1895 Marlin and let your patch extend to the beginning of the ogive if it will chamber that way. Having a case full of powder is not critical to success.

Also, check your receiver for a crack between the magazine tube and barrel before firing. Not unheard of with these rifles.

Hardcast416taylor
10-22-2018, 08:23 PM
A lot no longer wrap with the tail wound under the bullet. leave 3/16" over hang on base and wrap bullet then fold base under it should leave a small bit of the bullets base showing in the center and a much flatter base to work with. I get better release with this wrapping than the til and the ball on the base dosnt damage the base when fired


YUP! This is the way I`ve been wrapping for 6 + years with very good results.Robert