Gents and Madams,
As we've all come to know, black powder fouling is directly related to the bullet lube used and the amount of moisture present in the barrel to soften the fouling from the last shot.
The actual amount of blow tubing required between shots is directly related to the existing relative humidity. Here in the Desert Southwest, where summer temperatures often hoover around 100 degrees and the humidity sinks to single digits, the fouling gets hard. Hard fouling immediately in front of the chamber and especially in the last few inches of the barrel.
After reading Croft Barker's book on Black Powder Silhouette the quantity of huffs between shots becomes a recognizeable factor. Barker intimates the quantity of huffing between shots can approach up to ten each between shots when high temperature and low humidity conditions exist. Observance of shooters on the firing line will find folks mostly huffing a lot less and enjoying more fouling.
Bullet lubricant obviously fits into the scenario. Maybe some of the lubes relegated to "no good" status during high temperature conditions are really not the culprit and more huffing between shots is the answer? Many times when reading about persons with fouling problems and their bullet lubricants the missing information is the most important. Actual location of the shooting event (latitude and longitude), relative humidity and temperatures. Those that rave about their self made bullet lubes working so wonderfully seem to be living in climates equipped with lots of humidity and low temperatures.
When temperatures of 90 and 100 degrees are present, three and four huffs surely don't work. Five, six and seven huffs sometimes aren't enough.
Perhaps one full huff of moisture through the blow tube is needed for each ten degrees of temperature increase irregardless of the humidity amount? As the temperatures continue to go up with the advancing of the seasons, my notes will be more copious as to what the barrel looks like after each bank of targets is shot. Notes equipped with temperature and relative humidity figures. Maybe at the end of the shooting season a reasonable equation relating to temperature, humidity, fouling and huff quantities will surface?
Anyone else keeping notes?