This string has really stirred my interest. I have a can of Pyrodex that I haven't opened in 40 years. I originally used it for cast bullet loads in a Winchester 1894 rifle that I really regret having sold when I was younger and dumber. This can has both "RS" and "Rifle and Shotgun" on the front of the label, but reads ""FFFG equivalent" on the back. I haven't used Pyrodex recently, but I believe Hodgdon now considers "RS" an FFG equivalent and "P" an FFFG equivalent.
But, to the point. I was curious to see how the 40-year-old Pyrodex compared to equivalent loads of Triple 7 and Black MZ I have on hand. I did not run the tests in my ML rifle. For the sake of expediency, I ran the tests in .38 Special cases with the powder loaded to the base of a 125 gr. bullet. The volume turned out to be about 18 gr. in my Traditions brass powder measure.
I set the measure by pouring the powder from a case filled to my satisfaction, then pressed the plunger till the powder was flush with the top and locked it. I used this measure setting to charge 15 cases, five of each getting Pyrodex, Triple 7, and Black MZ. I visually checked the cases to make certain the fills were uniform. I chronographed the loads fired from a Ruger Blackhawk with a 7½" barrel. The results are as follows:
Avg. Hi Lo Difference Hi/Lo
Pyrodex 538 645 443 202 37%
Triple 7 800 824 754 70 9%
Black MZ 717 824 662 162 22%
I realize the effective difference in charge uniformity would be less with 80 gr. or so loads, but I was just looking for an indication of what was going on. Since I haven't used recently manufactured Pyrodex to compare with T7 or BMZ, I don't know how its energy compares. For those who do, does current Pyrodex have significantly less energy than T7 or BMZ, or are we looking at degradation over time?
Or, is this just a mystery I'm going to have to live with?