I promised to let you know how my experiment with leaving a dirty chamber loaded with 777 for the whole season came out. I would like to tell you I shot my deer with that inline loaded with 777, but I carried my .54 Deer Creek mountain rifle every other day, loaded with Goex 2fg,and a patched RB. That was what I had today when a blind, deaf, retarded Whitetail spike, with a head cold so he couldn't smell , wandered into my self imposed (60 year old eyes and open sights ) 50 yard range limitation. Two weeks ago tomorrow, I took both rifles out to the range, and made sure they were sighted in. I went home, and cleaned both rifles, then dried the bore on the inline, put a musket cap on the nipple and fired it. then I put 55 grains equivalent of triple seven in, stepped out the door, put on another cap , and fired it to make sure there would be no oil left to foul the charge, then went back in, and loaded it with another 55 of triple seven and one of those green sabot .50 bullets. I then used three patches, barely damp with moose milk to clean the bore above the load. The third patch was pretty clean, so I wrapped a dry patch around a .50 cal. bore mop and dried the bore. I dampened another patch with straight Ballistol, wrapped it around a new mop, and ran it up and down the bore 4 or 5 times. I carried that rifle every other day, and wiped the bore with Ballistol every night it was carried. Tonight when I got home, I cleaned the .54 , then went out and shot the charge from the inline. Took the breach plug out, and pushed a wet patch through. It came out the muzzle looking brownish, so I thought it had rusted. I cleaned the bore with hot soapy water, dried it, patched it with Ballistol, and checked the bore, especially the chamber, with a bore scope. Nothing. No sign of rust or pits. Actually, I came up four days short of a whole season,but it had been loaded for thirteen days, 4 hours. My friends who did this last year weren't exaggerating. Looks like I can try the same with my traditional rifles next year. cowpox