First, this is for folks that already know how to reload modern smokeless shells.
Learn how to reload first and then try black powder.
You'll need some throwaway once fired straight wall plastic hulls. Herter's, Federal, Estate, Rio, brand doesn't matter. You will load them once, shoot, and toss them and get more. Check down the barrels each shot for blown base wads, but I've never seen a base wad come loose.
A single stage MEC, Lyman Easy Loader, or Lee Load All, or PW 375
Do not smoke around black powder. Go see the angels later. Be double careful about fire and don't have any more powder in the reservoir than you'd like to blow up. Never force primers and feed primers one at a time. Wear safety goggles and say your prayers before messing with black powder.
You'll need a pound or two of FFG black powder
Use any 209 standard primer. Here's where Cheddites shine.
Get a bag of 500 1/2" fiber cushion wads, I like the ones with hard sides, and 500 .125" nitro cards
Use a 1 1/8 oz shot bushing and probably the same bushing for the powder. You want from 75-85 grains, 82 grains being a three dram load, 75 grains a 2 3/4 dram load. Check your powder throws on a good scale. The important thing is to have enough powder so you'll get good crimps.
Now, load 25 shells at a time using 7 1/2 or 8 shot. Resize, prime, charge with black powder, nitro card first, ram home the cushion was with about 50 pounds or so of was pressure, drop the shot, and adjust crimp.
I may be overly cautious about black powder loading, but it is easy to touch off black powder.
Now select a suitable old smoke pole like this 1902 O Grade Damascus a client actually gave me a few years ago in two pieces, but thanks to David Lauer and some artificial rawhide the broken stock is mended.
At forty yards the left full barrel shoots a good pattern with 3 drams FFG, 1 1/8 oz chilled 7 1/2 shot, Herter's hulls, 1/2 cushion and .125 nitro card. Didn't even have to change crimps from loading AA's on a MEC 600 Mk V with adjustable charge bar.
The right modified choke does open up just a bit.
It's for a crack shot at skeet though. Right and left barrels pattern tight at 21 yards.
Loading a box of these black powder shells costs about double the price of light target loads. You'll not get many shells from a pound of black powder.
But shooting shotguns is supposed to be fun, and shooting black powder shells is just a hoot and barrels of laughs and smiles.
Clean your gun, completely, preferably with hot soapy water.
And never shoot black powder from a pristine, nice old gun that you'd cry to see get some rust spots or discoloration.
Enjoy!
Learn how to reload first and then try black powder.
You'll need some throwaway once fired straight wall plastic hulls. Herter's, Federal, Estate, Rio, brand doesn't matter. You will load them once, shoot, and toss them and get more. Check down the barrels each shot for blown base wads, but I've never seen a base wad come loose.
A single stage MEC, Lyman Easy Loader, or Lee Load All, or PW 375
Do not smoke around black powder. Go see the angels later. Be double careful about fire and don't have any more powder in the reservoir than you'd like to blow up. Never force primers and feed primers one at a time. Wear safety goggles and say your prayers before messing with black powder.
You'll need a pound or two of FFG black powder
Use any 209 standard primer. Here's where Cheddites shine.
Get a bag of 500 1/2" fiber cushion wads, I like the ones with hard sides, and 500 .125" nitro cards
Use a 1 1/8 oz shot bushing and probably the same bushing for the powder. You want from 75-85 grains, 82 grains being a three dram load, 75 grains a 2 3/4 dram load. Check your powder throws on a good scale. The important thing is to have enough powder so you'll get good crimps.
Now, load 25 shells at a time using 7 1/2 or 8 shot. Resize, prime, charge with black powder, nitro card first, ram home the cushion was with about 50 pounds or so of was pressure, drop the shot, and adjust crimp.
I may be overly cautious about black powder loading, but it is easy to touch off black powder.
Now select a suitable old smoke pole like this 1902 O Grade Damascus a client actually gave me a few years ago in two pieces, but thanks to David Lauer and some artificial rawhide the broken stock is mended.


At forty yards the left full barrel shoots a good pattern with 3 drams FFG, 1 1/8 oz chilled 7 1/2 shot, Herter's hulls, 1/2 cushion and .125 nitro card. Didn't even have to change crimps from loading AA's on a MEC 600 Mk V with adjustable charge bar.

The right modified choke does open up just a bit.

It's for a crack shot at skeet though. Right and left barrels pattern tight at 21 yards.


Loading a box of these black powder shells costs about double the price of light target loads. You'll not get many shells from a pound of black powder.
But shooting shotguns is supposed to be fun, and shooting black powder shells is just a hoot and barrels of laughs and smiles.
Clean your gun, completely, preferably with hot soapy water.
And never shoot black powder from a pristine, nice old gun that you'd cry to see get some rust spots or discoloration.
Enjoy!