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gun powder
Typically 50 to 75 grains of ffG powder.
Depends on the bullet weight
It depends on the type of powder, the age and caliber of the cannon, the condition of the cannon, the projectile, etc.
It is a Mountain Stalker. You should contact customer service, and get an owner's manual for your rifle. A .54 caliber rifle will use ABOUT 80-90 grains of black powder per shot. The exact load will depend of whether you are shooting round patched ball, Maxi-ball, or sabots.
0.75 caliber smooth bore black powder flintlock muskets.Musket bayonets.Kentucky hunting black powder flintlock rifles.Various knives.Tomahawks.Sailing warships.Cannons.etc.
Yes the difference in size is minimal you can cut off excess matirial after you start the ball in the bore if you want.
Most .50 Caliber rifles ,[ in good condition] can handle 100 grains of black powder. Some new in-line models can handle up to 150 grains.
Whether you should or not will depend on what Browning says in relation to their warranty.
Automatic weapons typically use recoil or a gas blowback system to eject the spent cartridge casing and reload the next cartridge from the magazine. Blowback systems use the gas from the powder ignition of the cartridge to eject the casing and reload the next shell. A portion of the ignited gas is redirected to force the action back far enough to reload. Most automatic weapons use this design. Recoil systems are just what it implies - the recoil from the ignited cartridge forces the bolt back and reloads the next.
You reload automatically when you use up ammo. To manually reload press r.
Depending on the manufacturer, either Size 10 or 11.