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Muzzleloading

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I’m designing a muzzleloader. How far will the hot gases from a 0.06” hole expand? I’m not talking about the reach of the jet, but the expansion of the jet (look at the picture). And just for curiosity, how far will the jet travel?

 
I have heard even Superman is unable to hold back expanding gas.

On one of my brass cannons, black powder cut a line in the fuse hole like an oxy-acetylene torch

In my steel cannon, I put in a percussion cap nipple

I frequently use more powder than normal and the fire that comes out the touch hole is fierce

But I can't answer your question
 
You need to solve
  • a physics problem--Ideal Gas Law
  • a chemical reaction problem-- KNO3 + S + C = K2S + CO2 + N2
  • and a thermodynamics problem--the chemical reaction is an exothermic reaction and provides the energy (temperature) for the Ideal Gas Law
All these problems need to be solved simultaneously and as a function of time.

If there is a rocket propulsion engineer on here, they may be able to work it out for you.

I remember working similar problems in college, but I'm 45 years away from those days and don't remember enough of the details to work it out.
 
I would drill a hole in a piece of wood, the size of a barrel you want.

Slide the wood down the barrel until the edge of the 0.06" hole is at the edge of the wood and light it off safely

The jet will burn the wood and leave you a template of distance and temperature
 
I’m designing a muzzleloader. How far will the hot gases from a 0.06” hole expand? I’m not talking about the reach of the jet, but the expansion of the jet (look at the picture). And just for curiosity, how far will the jet travel?

What is the temperature and velocity of your hot gas? At what temperature do you no longer consider the gases a jet? You have some basic testing to do first. Guessing your propellant/heat source will be blackpowder. Do you know the deflagration rate of your powder? Probably should start your testing to understand that, then move on to measuring the pressure wave from detonation. Not sure how best to measure.
 
At a range session this morning. Granddaughter in next firing bay, on my right 6 feet maybe was getting “dusted” with ???, 44 cap and ball revolver.
After a bit she shot a few rounds thru the same gun with me now in her spot. True enough at every shot I could feel light impacts on my-bare arm and a bit of concussion on the chest. The concussion obviously from muzzle blast but the the debris were from the cap area. I could see the cap fire and assume part was blow back from the flash hole, which effectively flowers the cap.
In this case the “jet” had become a cloud.
 
Was watching this gentleman demonstrate the escaping gas from a revolver cylinder.

So my question is not regarding the jet really, because the jet will be directed away, but the expansion of the gas surrounding the jet. (The jet question was just out of curiosity).

Take a look at this picture


perhaps it expands more like this though?


And yes, I will use pyrodex and black powder.
 
Last edited:
You need to solve
  • a physics problem--Ideal Gas Law
  • a chemical reaction problem-- KNO3 + S + C = K2S + CO2 + N2
  • and a thermodynamics problem--the chemical reaction is an exothermic reaction and provides the energy (temperature) for the Ideal Gas Law
All these problems need to be solved simultaneously and as a function of time.

If there is a rocket propulsion engineer on here, they may be able to work it out for you.

I remember working similar problems in college, but I'm 45 years away from those days and don't remember enough of the details to work it out.
Hey, since when did muzzleloading become "Rocket Science"?:dunno::ThankYou::ghostly::horseback:
 

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