in which case one can recombine via tumbling with lead ball media. the components do not disappear.Just be aware that if it gets really wet and stays that way for awhile, potassium nitrate will readily dissolve in water and the resulting separation may cause your powder to be less efficient and/or burn incompletely causing more fouling. If it dries and looks like it has a white powdery coating, that's the potassium nitrate separating out.
i have!So...don't dry it on the woodstove, is that what I'm hearing?
True, but at that point you're milling and if you are trying to resurrect commercial powder without the know how or equipment to turn millings into useable powder... I can just feel the admins looking at mein which case one can recombine via tumbling with lead ball media. the components do not disappear.
Incorrect re: heat. It needs a spark or flame to ignite. Indirect heat does not set it off. I have seen full cans of powder with half of the labels burned off in a house fire that did not ignite. Putting the lead balls in a can and shaking it up is a good idea.if it gets just wet enough to clump in your bottle/can, dry it out, drop a half dozen lead round balls in and shake it like a James Bond Martini!
if you actually regrind it you can change the burning properties by disrupting the factory glazes. probably not enough change to discern but the possibility is there.
people fear black powder needlessly. it needs heat to ignite .
I believe I read awhile back that if BP gets wet, you can let ot dry, regrind, you are good to go? True?
certainly. flame =heat. spark = flame=heat.Incorrect re: heat. It needs a spark or flame to ignite. Indirect heat does not set it off. I have seen full cans of powder with half of the labels burned off in a house fire that did not ignite. Putting the lead balls in a can and shaking it up is a good idea.
Enter your email address to join: