Col. Batguano said:
Has anyone EVER been able to make the subs work as priming powder? I know it's reputed they don't work well, but will they EVER work? It would seem that witht he sparks at 2000 degrees, and the flash point of the subs around 850, that the math would certainly indicate they would, in theory work. I'm not going to waste my time trying (I have enough to keep straight and manage at the range as it is to conduct science experiments).
Hi Bat...,
I had a chance to time a sub called Black Mag Flash (I think). I read an article in MB where the author thought it would work as priming powder. He said that while he had not fired a flinter for 20 years, he thought it was pretty fast. (That sentence was my first clue.)
I contacted him and asked for a sample. I offered to to do a comparison between priming powders. I told him I thought it would be fair to compare Flash to the best, and mentioned Swiss Null B.
By this time, in years of timing, I have numbers for everything from Null B to Goex cannon grade powder. BTW Null B will run .030 to .035 second to ignite. Goex Cannon comes in at .080 seconds. Black Mag Flash ran .140 seconds or almost twice as slow as Goex Cannon.
During the time I had the sample, I had Steve Chapman watch it ignite, well at least sometimes. We noticed that the ignition was so slow that we could see the sparks momentarily before ignition took place. I have never seen sparks when igniting priming powder before. Ignition is so fast that one can't see sparks before ignition, but you could on this stuff.
So does it work? Well, I doubt if shooters would like to prime with Cannon grade, but Goex Cannon is almost twice as fast as Black Mag Flash. I wrote back and said it wasn't ready for Prime Time. A few months after this, the plant had an explosion. I don't think they rebuilt.
Regards,
Pletch