Being an in line you should have no trouble with pellets.
Yes, the faster twists 1.50 and lower are designed to shoot saboted and / or patched round ball loads.
pellets, powder
don't believe any such item as 58 cal. black powder pellets. but, there is a 58 cal. slug for the 58 cal. black powder rifle
to crush to a podwer
Everything is loaded from the end of the muzzle. Pour a quantity of black powder down the barrel and tamp it down with the push-rod. Follow that with some shot pellets and tamp those down too. That forms a tight 'plug'.
The raw plastic pellets are manufactured with a percentage of photo luminescent powder mixed in.
As a very general rule, bullets are propelled by burning powder, pellets by air or C02
Yes. Pellets have spaces between them, and they won't be as dense as powder. Particles of powder have tiny spaces between them, and won't be as dense as the solid metal strips. Another way to look at it is that a strip of metal is a solid piece of metal. Anything else divides the metal into "bits" of some size, and they have a limited ability to pack together.
In certain cultural or religious funeral traditions, throwing white powder on a coffin symbolizes purity, cleansing, and the belief in the deceased's transition to the afterlife.
50-75 grains
There are two different kinds of gunpowder: black powder and smokeless powder, each is made entirely differently.black powder - charcoal, potassium nitrate, and sulfur are separately ground and the resulting fine powders are blended by tumblingsmokeless powder - cellulose containing materials (e.g. cotton, wood, paper scrap) are dissolved in nitric acid making a cellulose nitrate paste; this paste is extruded to make pellets of desired size and shape; the pellets are dried (in some smokeless powder formulas other nitrate based explosive materials are added to the cellulose nitrate paste; e.g. nitroglycerin) Note: there are other smokeless powder manufacturing processes not involving extrusion, but they still make the powder from cellulose nitrate
The Wolf Magnum is rated for 150 grains maximum charge and designed for use with Pyrodex pellets or similar pellet type powder and 209 shotgun primer ignition.