Unfortunately real black powder isn’t allowed to be sold where I live, and the nearest place I could pick it up is about 6 hours away. So for the foreseeable future pyrodex is the way to go for me, unless I find a good deal online.
No options with Goex, maybe you should read some of my other posts about my opinion on them. I use Swiss.do you have stock options with Goex? how do you know about pyro being corrosive if you dont use it. you have tons of experience and use what you are familiar with so use it. I dont understand why guys have to make things up. both BP and pyro are monumentally corrosive and rifles have to be cleaned right after shooting. I have rifles 40 years fired mostly pyro no corrosion it cleans up fast with soap and hot water just like BP
Wait…. There’s folks who DON”T put peanuts in their cokes?!? Them folks sound like carpet-bagging Yankees and are definitely not to be trusted!!Well fiddle dee! I guess I’m uncool!
But, I also put peanuts in my Coke.
Perchlorates are salts that attack the surface of the bore from the moment of ignition.
Over time though micro pitting will develop no matter how quickly the bore is cleaned.
Presently Swiss and Scheutzen are the readily available black powders being sold in the US.Thanks for all the responses. I have learned a lot from the discussion.
Is Goex back in business? As far as I know Swiss is the only BP available in the US right now. Please correct me if I'm wrong.
Isn’t that kinda like saying ‘I ate my bacon raw and got sick, bacon is uncool cause it makes people sick!’Pyrodex because of it's perchlorate roots is highly corrosive, much more so than real black powder. Perchlorates are also part of the problem with corrosive primers in surplus military centerfire ammo and if it will ruin a centerfire firearm, it will certainly do the same on your muzzleloader. So yes, it is undeniably an issue.
So from this thread I've observed that there is a segment of the muzzleloading community that say they use Pdex cuz they can't get real black anywhere but I'd bet a dollar that they are only looking in lgs or brick n mortar places. For reasons stated earlier, finding real black at a brick n mortar retail place is not going to happen. Real black is easily had online. Pool your order with a local reenactment group, join a NMLRA Charter Club or check into fireworks supply houses. Real black is available if you are serious about using it.
I won't use Pdex. Is it elitism? I don't think so since I've seen quite a few guns with ruined bores from using it and the owners believing the original hype surrounding it and I choose not to go down that path. If a sub must be used, I like T7 far better than Pdex. So make your choice.
or a ford fizzle! the new ford pickup.Pyrodex fouling is more corrosive than black powder fouling. Pyrodex degrades chemically with time. Black powder hardly ever does. Many claim Pyrodex is not as consistent as black powder from shot to shot. Purodex is nearly impossible to use in a flintlock. Pyrodex fouling does seem to hide in the microscopic crevices in some barrel allloys and creeps back out to rust a few days after a cleaning. I found that the old fashioned WW2 army bore cleaner, smelly stuff with benzene and other hazardous substances does a better job at neutralizing Pyrodex fouling. Personally, I would avoid Pyrodex except as a possible very very last resort. If you look at it like a Ford Chevy rivalry, it is like driving a Yugo.
mirrors my thoughts. and as for being called a snob, at times in my life i thought that was my name, only most people dropped the N.Now, I dont care if you use it or you dont use it none of my bussiness. I chose not to and if in your mind that makes me a snob well I've been called lots things much worse than that. I tried it when it first hit the market an didn't care for it.
The old GOEX manufacturing facility has been bought by Estes who used GOEX for their model rocket propellant. Expect the new powder sometime next year.
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