Hello,
I like the smell of the sulfur as well.
That's really not the issue.
I love to experiment, love to read about experiments, and love to see old ideas come back around in new packaging.
The Turtle submarine, for example, is a favorite weapon of mine used in a war against Britain.
I like seeing combustible paper cartridges... and then seeing ammo companies today playing around with caseless ammunition.
Revisiting old ideas.
I even learned here that there was something similar to the Foster slug back in the 1860s in Europe.
Just because I bring this up, does not mean I like the stuff (I've actually never tried it, and have no real plans to do so as of right now).
I just like, as I said, seeing old ideas revisited today, especially when they're introduced as new, improved over the old stuff. I get a kick out of that.
Mostly though, my favorite time in history is during the late muzzleloader/early breechloader era. Practical repeating arms were coming on the scene as cap and ball revolvers, but repeating rifles hadn't found their niche yet, and if you wanted power and accuracy, you went with a good muzzleloader.
I like to poke around that era and see what I can find hidden in the nooks and crannies, mostly forgotten by mainstream history. I love the Starr double-action cap'n'ball revolver, tape priming systems, scent bottle primers, etc.
Got to thinking about the muzzleloading air rifle on used on the Lewis and Clark expedition, and IIRC, there was a corps of Austrian(?) riflemen who used air rifles against Napoleon(?) (really have to dig out the history books again).
Anyone caught with an air rifle during that war was put to death because it was considered "cheating".
I would hope that I could build a muzzle loading air rifle replica and discuss it here, as it would be historically correct, even though it wouldn't use black powder as a propellant.
A very interesting side note in history as far as I'm concerned.
Likewise, this stuff the Swiss came up with all those years ago and is now marketed as a substitute - it's not about making a better powder at all, at least not for me. Black powder has endured while air powered weapons have largely devolved into children's 'toys', and the no-sulfur Swiss stuff and brown powder faded quickly with the advent of the age of modern firearms. As far as I'm concerned, black is king.
The side notes of history are what I'm interested in, and I've learned more from you good folks at these fora in the couple of weeks I've been here than I have in the years on other fora, and books only go so far, as well, concentrating mainly on what survived to the modern age.
I was once an experimental archaeologist (though I did not know the term then). I built fairly powerful bows at the age of 10 or 12 for my friends and myself - and they did account for some small game. My friend was poor and the taking of squirrel inside a woods by his home inside town gave them some protein on the table.
Later, I got interested in the traditional sling - not slingshot - and built a few of those. Very fun to hunt game with. A couple rabbits fell to mine.
Then atlatls caught my attention, and my home fashioned spears would go a decent distance with them.
Boomerangs were pretty cool as well, though I was not so good at making those.
The point is, I explored each and every one of these arms thoroughly before making them. I studied even more beyond that, but didn't make them for a number of reasons - monetary (I was a teenager in school), lack of skills (I do not work wood well enough to fashion anything beyond basic bows - a wooden stock for my rifle seems a daunting task), or it seemed outright dangerous.
I did build a model cannon though. It fired a .30 caliber (IIRC) ball and used blackpowder pulled from firecrackers as propellant. The fuses served their purpose, and the barrel was a reinforced aluminum tube. Put a hole in the barn wall with that one.
Anyway, probably more than you wanted to know about me, and way more than I usually talk about.
Suffice to say, the wheres, hows, whats and wherefores interest me to no end.
I think there are a few folks on here like this, as well.
I apologize for the long-winded post.
Josh
P.S. I blew myself up once with something very close to blackpowder. I won't go into what it was made of for obvious reasons, but it was made to be rocket fuel. This is why I don't mess with the stuff today. I had 2nd degree burns on my hands and face, and I didn't do my lungs any favors. If anyone needs to use someone as an example of what not to do, feel free to use this. Suffice to say I was very, very lucky that it was not enclosed. It was far more energetic than I anticipated, and if it had been enclosed, I likely wouldn't be here. I have far, far more respect for the stuff than my attitude would sometimes let on. J.S.