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[[File:Pyrodex powder ffg.jpg|thumb|upright=1.35|Pyrodex, a modern black powder substitute for [[muzzleloader|muzzleloading]] rifles, in FFG (RS) size]]
[[File:Pyrodex powder ffg.jpg|thumb|upright=1.35|Pyrodex, a modern black powder substitute for [[muzzleloader|muzzleloading]] rifles, in FFG (RS) size]]


A '''black powder substitute''' is a replacement for [[black powder]] used in [[muzzleloader|muzzleloading]] and [[cartridge (firearms)|cartridge]] [[firearm]]s. Black powder substitutes offer a number of advantages over black powder, primarily including reduced sensitivity as an explosive and increased efficiency as a propellant powder.
A '''black powder substitute''' is a replacement for [[black powder]] used in [[muzzleloader|muzzleloading]] and [[cartridge (firearms)|cartridge]] [[firearm]]s. Black powder substitutes offer a number of advantages over black powder, primarily including reduced sensitivity as an explosive and increased efficiency as a [[Propellant|propellant powder]].


==Types==
==Types==

Revision as of 04:48, 19 September 2023

Pyrodex, a modern black powder substitute for muzzleloading rifles, in FFG (RS) size

A black powder substitute is a replacement for black powder used in muzzleloading and cartridge firearms. Black powder substitutes offer a number of advantages over black powder, primarily including reduced sensitivity as an explosive and increased efficiency as a propellant powder.

Types

Hodgdon's Pyrodex was the first widely available substitute for black powder on the market. Pyrodex is less sensitive to ignition than black powder and uses the same shipping and storage guidelines as smokeless powder. Pyrodex is more energetic per unit of mass than black powder, but it is less denseand can be substituted at a 1:1 ratio by volume for black powder in many applications.[1] Pyrodex is similar in composition to black powder but incorporates several other compounds. His composition, according to the US Patent 4,128,443 filed by the inventor Dan Pawlak in 1975 is as follows (in % by weight)[2][3]

Its combustion is slower and produces a lower maximum pressure than black powder, which is advantageous for shooting historical weapons but provides the same amount of work.[4] In fact, as with most substitutes and for the same volumetric charge, Pyrodex produces higher projectile velocities than are commonly achieved with black powder. [5] Originally available as loose powder in two granularities, RS (Rifle/Shotgun) equal to FFG black powder, and P (Pistol) equal to FFFg black powder, Pyrodex is now becoming available in Select and solid pellet varieties. While Pyrodex offers improved safety and increased efficiency (in terms of shots per pound of powder) over black powder, the level of fouling is similar; Pyrodex is caustic and corrosive. Therefore, the same cleaning lay regimen used on black-powder fouling must be employed when Pyrodex has been used.

Hodgdon also makes Triple Seven, one of the family of sulfurless black powder substitutes. It also contains potassium perchlorate but also 3-Nitrobenzoic acid. Triple Seven and Black Mag3 are more energetic by mass than black powder and can produce higher velocities and pressures. Triple Seven is a volumetric substitute for black powder but produces higher velocity. To match the velocities of a traditional black powder load it is recommended to reduce the load by 15%.[6] Still burning carbon, the carbon-based fuel burned here is from the sugar family, not from charcoal.

Western Powders Company introduced Blackhorn 209 in 2008. Like many other black powder substitutes, it is made to be a volumetric substitute of black powder. It is dispensed in "black powder powder measures" for muzzleloading applications. Blackhorn 209 is essentially non-corrosive, low-fouling, very consistent in gas generation, but non-hygroscopic.[7]

Measurement

The grain is the traditional measurement of the weight of bullets, black powder, and smokeless powder in English-speaking countries. It is the unit measured by the scales used in handloading; commonly, bullets are measured in increments of one grain, gunpowder in increments of 0.1 grains.[8] There are 7,000 grains in one pound.

Pyrodex, and most other black powder substitutes, are formulated to be a volume-for-volume equivalent of black powder, not an equivalent mass-for-mass (weight-for-weight). Pyrodex is measured by volumetric measurement techniques, not in grains on a scale, due to the difference in density of Pyrodex versus black powder. For example, to measure a "60 grain equivalent" of Hodgdon's Pyrodex suitable for use in a muzzleloader rifle, one uses a volumetric measure that produces a volume of Pyrodex equal to the volume of a mass of 60 grains of black powder. Due to Pyrodex being less dense than black powder, a measurement by weight on a scale of 60 grains of mass of Pyrodex would be near a 30 percent overload.

Volume equivalence is a benefit in loading muzzleloading firearms, traditionally loaded using volumetric measures. This becomes an issue when fabricating black-powder cartridges through handloading using a black-powder substitute in place of black powder, since it is common practice to measure by weight when loading cartridges (there are published conversion tables).

Disadvantages

With the increased safety of the black powder substitutes often comes a reduced sensitivity to ignition. Flintlocks in particular need very sensitive, finely granulated powder for use in the flash pan, and black powder tends to perform more reliably in these and traditional caplock guns than substitutes. Modern in-line muzzleloaders provide a stronger ignition than traditional designs, and this helps to increase reliability with less flame-sensitive substitutes. In addition, magnum percussion caps are often recommended for use with black powder substitutes for both inline and traditional caplock guns, in place of the #11 percussion caps traditionally used with black powder in these guns, to achieve the best ignition reliability.

When used for recovery system ejection charges in high-power rocketry, black powder substitutes need a greater degree of confinement to ensure a complete burn and generation of sufficient ejection pressure. This can be achieved by wrapping 2–3 layers of electrical tape over the ejection charge canister before installation.[citation needed]

Legality

United States

By property insurance and federal transportation regulations, black powder substitutes also can be transported and stored in interstate commerce in the United States using smokeless powder regulations, instead of the much more restrictive black powder regulations. Because of this, black powder substitutes are thus becoming more commonly available than traditional black powder, which has largely vanished from the shelves of most retailers.

United Kingdom

Unlike black powder, Pyrodex does not require a license to buy or store.[9] Also a Recipient Competent Authority (RCA) transfer document is not required for Pyrodex.[10] Black powder must be stored in a wooden box constructed to certain precise specifications, but Pyrodex can be stored like any other modern propellant.

References

  1. ^ Fadala, Sam (2006). The Complete Blackpowder Handbook (5th ed.). Gun Digest Books. p. 203. ISBN 978-0-89689-390-0. Second, Pyrodex provides more shots per pound than blackpowder because it is less dense.
  2. ^ J Forensic Sci, 2011 Jan;56(1):194-9."Discriminating Hodgdon Pyrodex(®) and Triple Seven(®) using gas chromatography-mass spectrometry" DOI: 10.1111/j.1556-4029.2010.01534.x
  3. ^ D.E.Pawlak,M.Levenson, Deflagrating Propellant Compositions, US-Patent 4,128,443,USA,1978.
  4. ^ Koch, Ernst-Christian (2021). High Explosives, Propellants, Pyrotechnics. Berlin: De Gruyter. pp. 578–579. ISBN 978-3-11-066052-4.
  5. ^ Barnes Bullets tests on their projectiles using Pyrodex,Hodgdon's Triple Se7en and black powder https://www.barnesbullets.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/05/Muzzleloader-Data.pdf
  6. ^ "Hodgdon Loading Notes Pyrodex and 777". Archived from the original on 2017-05-20.
  7. ^ "BLACKHORN 209 RAISES THE BAR ON MUZZLELOADING PROPELLANTS". Chuck Hawks.
  8. ^ "International Practical Shooting Confederation" (PDF). IPSC Canada. January 4, 2004. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2007-07-09. Retrieved 2007-11-30.
  9. ^ "Pyrodex".
  10. ^ "Transfer of explosives".

External links