TNHillbilly
45 Cal.
- Joined
- Apr 18, 2008
- Messages
- 521
- Reaction score
- 0
It seems from what I read FFFFg is generally used in primer pans. Is there a noticeable in using 4F vs 3F? If so, I guess the question then, is why?
TN Hills guy said:It seems from what I read FFFFg is generally used in primer pans. Is there a noticeable in using 4F vs 3F? If so, I guess the question then, is why?
roundball said:TN Hills guy said:It seems from what I read FFFFg is generally used in primer pans. Is there a noticeable in using 4F vs 3F? If so, I guess the question then, is why?
Different powder granulations have different burn rates...ie: 4F burns faster than 3F burns faster than 2F, etc...I choose to use 4F for prime because its faster and want every millisecond of ignition speed I can get from every component in the ignition chain.
Hunting with 4F prime is no problem at all, just dump it out and refresh the prime every half hour/hour depending on the humidity...never had a hunting failure with 4F prime yet.
TN Hills guy said:Interesting, not sure how one times such things but interesting comparison... .
Yeah....depending on humidity. When hunting it is often hard to determine when your prime (4fg) is too damp to ignite readily. It is one thing to say change prime every half hour and another to find out that you should have changed every 20 minutes! By using your main powder charge granulation for prime also, you reduce the amount of moisture absorbed and also eliminate one more component in the loading sequence. I like to use 3fg for both in hunting situations; target shooting is something else and 4fg is then regularly used for priming. Emeryroundball said:
depending on the humidity...never had a hunting failure with 4F prime yet.
mazo kid said:When hunting it is often hard to determine when your prime (4fg) is too damp to ignite readily.roundball said:
depending on the humidity...never had a hunting failure with 4F prime yet.
Curious to know if your shooting conditions have usually been under high humidity which might have effected 4F if it wasn't refreshed periodically...otherwise I can't imagine what would produce the results you mentioned...unless maybe the 4F was a bad batch or something.Cutfingers said:I have not performed any "scientific" tests, but since switching from FFFF to FFF in my pan I have had, in my opinion, much better ignition.
THG,TN Hills guy said:It seems from what I read FFFFg is generally used in primer pans. Is there a noticeable in using 4F vs 3F? If so, I guess the question then, is why?
Enter your email address to join: