1960-62, our Reenactment group used original Civil War powder in our 3" cannon, never had a problem. And our original 1863 .577 cal Springfields used FFG from 5 lb cans also from the same period. We did use fresh-cast and lubed minie' balls.
Thank you. Sounds like these circa 1980 cans of FFG should shoot ok in our cannons. I am still leery about the FFFG, but I like the suggestion above to do deliberate squib loads with taters. Guessing half an ounce charge should be safe. Only powder we have used is Scheutzen Cannon Grade, very coarse and slow burning. We send all kinds of projectiles hundreds of yards.1960-62, our Reenactment group used original Civil War powder in our 3" cannon, never had a problem. And our original 1863 .577 cal Springfields used FFG from 5 lb cans also from the same period. We did use fresh-cast and lubed minie' balls.
Excellent point, thank you. I am skeptical of all old cartridges, old powders unless they are sealed and original. There is just no telling what might have been done with them. I think this FFG is going to be good salute and squib load material. We normally use fuse to fire the cannons, but a trickle of FFFG and a long linstock can work, too. Got a lot of good ideas, advice and suggestions here. Really appreciate itBe careful with gifted powder. Make sure that the container was not re-purposed for something else, like smokeless powder.
“Our two cannons have bores 2” and 2.5” in diameter.”At Jamestown and Yorktown we use 2F for blank artillery charges and 3F for priming as a matter of policy. You don’t say what size guns you have (what I consider a “big bore” cannon is probably not what you’re talking about) but in a 6 pound gun in good shape, a half pound blank charge is perfectly safe and impressively noisy.
Jay
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