For those of you contemplating the use of paraffin as a binder for your canister projectiles, I will convey to you an experience I had with paraffin used in this capacity and you can make up your minds as to it’s effectiveness. I found that melted paraffin, once hardened, is a very powerful binding agent. In fact, it is used in Military “Door Entry Shotshells” as a binder for the powdered steel which actually breaks the door-lock or hinge aimed at. Such a mass of tightly bound steel powder will fly a long distance if not broken up by a solid object. So, really small shot will probably not work too well, because the “inertia at rest” of such light weight shot will not be much greater than the mass of the wax binder. Without some definite amount of differential in the ability to move forward, between the shot and the wax mass, at the moment of firing, the mass of wax-bound projectiles will fly forward as a single unit. Not good.
I proved in 1969 that even # 8 bird shot is too light when I was in a small cabin on a lake in Vermont doing some fishing and reloading. I bought a 12 Ga. Lee Loader, the inexpensive, pound on it with a hammer, type. I was too ignorant to know that ONLY paper hulls could be crimped on that equipment! So, I wailed away on those poor plastic shotshells to no avail. The cabin had no equipment, but did have a couple old kerosene lanterns and lots of candles for times when the power went out. A light bulb appeared over my head…………..WAX……..drip wax into the shotshell after the #8 shot goes in, and those little pellets won't dribble out.
Dripping was way to slow, so I heated up 3 candles in an old enameled steel cup and I was in business! 50 in two hours, not bad. When we tossed a few clay birds later that afternoon, everyone there thought I had lost my touch. I couldn’t hit anything!! Well, you all know what happened, and I learned when I patterned one of those loads on an old, decayed boat hull at 30 to 40 yards. One 12 Ga. Hole and only 15 to 20, #8 shot holes appeared. Mystery solved!
So, if you are sure you want to try a paraffin binder, make sure that your shot size is large enough to insure that a bit of shot set-back will occur as the canister load is fired, to partially fracture the tight wax bond around your shot. Maybe # 4 buckshot is large enough at .24” dia., maybe 00 buck at .33” dia. I think you will have no problem with .40 or .50 cal. and larger, but in a golf ball sized bore the temptation to get more holes in the attacking infantry may lead to smaller shot sizes being used. Only empirical test results will tell us for sure. Actual observations of experiments will be necessary to tell where the “Wax, Wad-of-Shot” becomes an effective, “Long Range, Tight Group, Cannister Round”. More “Range Time” is necessary; where do we sign up??
Regards,
Mike and Tracy