My thoughts exactly. Looked long and hard at the photos and they do say catastrophic peak pressure. This type of violence is almost always a result of a accidental charge of smokeless powder. As stated above, this can result from carelessness or mis-identification of the powder type. Have seen or read incidents of bad reactions from smokeless due to storage in plastic containers not designed for powder storage, but never from storage of black powder. Whatever the cause, the result is violent, as these photos well illustrate...only chemical analysis of the gun's bore or the powder not fired will answer the question for sure.hanshi said::hmm: A fouled bore won't do it and neither will a double charge. A catastrophic event like this speaks of high pressures and pressures that peak in the breech. black powder won't do this; smokeless will.
Are they so visually similar that they could be mistaken?
hanshi said::hmm: A fouled bore won't do it and neither will a double charge. A catastrophic event like this speaks of high pressures and pressures that peak in the breech. black powder won't do this; smokeless will.
MattC said:Question: I have never reloaded or otherwise worked with smokeless powder, nor compared it side by side with black. Are they so visually similar that they could be mistaken? (all packaging aside)
MattC said:Question: I have never reloaded or otherwise worked with smokeless powder, nor compared it side by side with black. Are they so visually similar that they could be mistaken? (all packaging aside)
Rusty_Nail said:I am not up on smokeless, but remembering my dumb younger days, I seem to recall shotgun powder being the discs and the rifle and pistol powders were the tubular or pellet looking?
Is that right? :idunno:
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