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Thread: Making Black Powder

  1. #16
    Member Cordite's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by SF90 View Post
    I compress and granulate as I load 45/70 and snider brass as well as muzzle load.
    I made a compressing die using aluminium ends and two split plastic tubes I hose clamp closed - made that at work (when I was) and it's pretty generic.
    I've forgotten how many grams per CC I compress, but it comes out just a tad lighter than equiv Goes powders as I can't quite fit 500gms 'homemade' in a 500gm Goex can.
    I also made a press frame for compressing and used a ten ton hydraulic jack, then discovered I could compress in my workshop/garage vice.
    To do that I slightly dampen my weighed 'mix', load it into the die and squeeze. After 15 seconds I squeeze again, then a third time - or until my die closes to a designated length, it won't do it all in one 'squeeze' - not even with the jack.
    When done, I take the hose clamps off , remove the outer tube from the inner, then pry the inner tube apart and take out the pucks.
    I make three pucks in one squeeze, separated by plastic milk jug spacers.
    The pucks are about 1/4" thick, and I just lay them out and dry them where they won't get hurt. A solid puck is pretty hard to ignite - won't do it on its own.
    When thoroughly dry I put them in a plastic bag and beat the shit out of them with a hammer, then I shove the smashed bits in a ceramic coffee grinder and make the equiv F, FF, FFF and a considerable amount of dust which gets re-milled when I do it next time.
    I do it all in small quantities in case TSHTF.

    When I'm doing it - I'll spend a few days as it's time consuming and tedious, but I'll end up with a useful amount for little cost.
    Do you have a picture please of the puk-pressing tools you use, I can't quite visualise it.
    An itch ... is ... a desire to scratch

  2. #17
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    Quote Originally Posted by Micky Duck View Post
    I get get 55grns home rolled under projectile easy...65 If really tamp it in with base of smaller case or poke it in through powder funnel with slender rod.

    I can cram 80grs of mine in a Winchester 45/70 case using a 'drop tube' and a bit of compression - but I was out with my mate a few years back and watched him plonk two 330gr Gould's into two deer using only 50 gr of powder at 100 yards - lazered.
    Both those deer (red stags from memory) just 'humped up', walked a few laboured paces and fell over.
    Both shots were almost identical - range, animal behaviour, and both shots were pass-throughs.
    They were both out on the grass and I was able to watch everything.

    That was quite a lesson for me - as slow as those big bullets are, they take some stopping - so I'd say your 55grs are okay for bush hunting, as long as they go point first and are reasonably accurate.
    One thing is, most of the bush deer I've shot with BP had some awareness I was there and took off at the shot. And that's where I like 'heavy' and 'pass-throughs' - you got something to follow

  3. #18
    Member Driverman's Avatar
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    There is a very long thread on Cast boolits website about making blackpowder, Wellworth a read.
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  4. #19
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    Quote Originally Posted by Cordite View Post
    Do you have a picture please of the puk-pressing tools you use, I can't quite visualise it.

    This is a new Computer my son gave me and it's not registered or licensed for 'Word' - so it won't read my 'old computer' I got on a disc - and that's where my pictures are.

    My plastic cylinders are 97mm long, one inside the other and both split longitudinally.
    The I.D. of the smaller one is just under 61mm and the O.D. of the outside one is just over 68mm.
    Wall thickness of each tube is about 1.75mm - three hose clips hold them closed.
    The short aluminium end cap is shaped like a 'top hat' and has barrel 10mm long that fits neatly in the pipe - the 'top hat' bit is a flange 10mm thick by 76mm diameter. This cap is in place when I load powder into the die.
    The other cap has the same diameter barrel but is about 76mm long. It has the same flange as the other end, but is longer as this is the one that squeezes down.
    I just squeeze 'em up until they can't go any further.

    The two splits in the plastic barrels are offset to each other - so nothing comes out of them, and when I press I get almost zero free water, just a light dampness.
    I use distilled water as I read Early American powders could be plagued by impure water which had a deleterious (bad) effect on the long storage of that powder - so I play it safe.
    In the old days I used urine, fresh and stale because I'd read it made stronger powder, but reading up on the British powders of the time - and it's interesting reading too, they didn't bugger around with anything other than clean water.

    All up, my die is 116mm long and remarkably pleasing to look at
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  5. #20
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    Quote Originally Posted by Driverman View Post
    There is a very long thread on Cast boolits website about making blackpowder, Wellworth a read.

    Lots of guys across the ditch doing it - they helped me refine my processing.
    Charcoal is the most important thing in making a good (fast) powder, and willow is rated.

    I remember reading an answer someone asked the Guru's at Goex as to why their powder isn't as good (powerful) as Swiss - and the answer was ............... "We can make a much stronger powder - and that would screw up all those who use our powder and don't read labels."

    And that's relevant.
    I could probably make a faster powder, it's why I buggered around with the Alder - but truth is my powder operates the same as my Goex and that's all I need.

    But .......... I am a tinkerer
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  6. #21
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    Oh - and be a little careful with what you absorb from your readings, like anything there's some cowboys out there with advice I'm not totally onboard with .........

    But if I had a front loader I think I'd just make it the way 'Marty Henry' did ............ quicker and likely a lot safer
    I think they call that 'pulverone' ..............

  7. #22
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    Quote Originally Posted by GDMP View Post
    Surprising someone enterprising here has not set up a small powder mill and started producing black powder for sale.....especially with erratic supply from overseas sources.
    Van Tiel Pyrotechnics Ltd in the Waikato here makes good black powder called "Holy smoke". Therefore, surprisingly black powder isn't subject to the shortages we've experienced with other components.
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  8. #23
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    Quote Originally Posted by 7mmwsm View Post
    Would any of you guys who know be interested in running a workshop type day on this?
    I'd love to learn how to and how not to.
    Don't really trust Internet recipes.

    I'm actually moderately antisocial - I don't really like people that much, so no - don't think that's something I'd do.

    I spent 3 months trapping on my own up behind the Cobb Dam in the seventies and never saw a soul in that time - and it didn't worry me at all - just got a hankering for beer, fish 'n chips and chocolate. And that's why I live rural - there were bugger all people here when I arrived. Place is full of people now - three cars a minute.
    I didn't even like girls that much, or not enough to bring them home - until one day I did, and that's why I got kids.

    I do like to talk, you'll probably learn that - and I'll talk a lot of shit for no reason other than I like to talk - but you're over there and I'm here and that's okay.
    That probably sounds really rude, and I'm sorry if it does and I'm a bit embarrassed about it - but running a workshop - I'd probably shit my pants ...........
    Moa Hunter and Micky Duck like this.

  9. #24
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    Quote Originally Posted by GDMP View Post
    Surprising someone enterprising here has not set up a small powder mill and started producing black powder for sale.....especially with erratic supply from overseas sources.
    Oh - I thought about it, but got dragged into making parchment from possum skins instead and it was ten years before I surfaced.
    Martin (Van Tiel) had set up his business by that time - and I weren't getting any younger .............

    But I would like to see someone else competing, might help bring down price to a more affordable level ........... maybe.

    I'm no businessman - went bust with my last business.
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  10. #25
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    Martin's powder is quite highly rated from what I've heard - the blokes down the BP club like it, and they shoot distances I can't even see - just clearing that up

  11. #26
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    Quote Originally Posted by SF90 View Post
    Martin's powder is quite highly rated from what I've heard - the blokes down the BP club like it, and they shoot distances I can't even see - just clearing that up
    I have used most brands available in NZ, Goex, Schutzen, Swiss, Curtis & Harvey, Elephant with Swiss having the reputation of being cleanest & fastest but Van Tiel's Holy Smoke is right up there, comparable to Swiss easily. It's very good powder and NZ made so readily available. At some point BP will stop coming into NZ as prohibitive pricing for shipping explosives will have an effect on such a small market. I am also very keen to try his new BP Cartridge formulation, I'm hearing good things.
    Moa Hunter and Micky Duck like this.

  12. #27
    Member Micky Duck's Avatar
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    I substituted out the willow for totara and my powder got denser...if lived in north island tawa would be interesting to try as its rather similar to willow... I tried totara as have tree on front lawn and wee branch had blown off and was dry
    looking at burning characteristics of willow burns fast/burns clean with little ash/sparks if burnt green/is light in weight/easy to ignite....then thought about our native timbers and both tawa and totara met same criteria.
    75/15/10 black powder matters

  13. #28
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    https://web.archive.org/web/20110520...r/bp_menu.html here is the place to get your knowledge.....
    75/15/10 black powder matters

  14. #29
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    There's an internet bloke by the monicker 'Mad Monk' who did a lot of research into modern and historic powders - and wrote about it in a series of articles. Some of those are quite old now - but you might be able to dredge them up.

    His take is - Swiss is the best powder made today - and Goex used a 'special' charcoal they bought from a supplier who'd extracted whatever they wanted from the wood and dumped the 'char' to the Goex company.
    Swiss used Buckthorn Alder - which is currently the Rolls Royce wood for Black Powder charcoal.
    Goex used whatever they could get cheap, their primary client being the military - us gun enthusiasts being just a sideline.
    I see Goex has different offerings on the market now - I think 'Swiss' has made them think about pulling their sox up.

    There's been good and bad powders through history, but concensus usually points to the Brits making some of the best powders ever made. The Govt mills at Waltham Abbey made a lot of these powders in the nineteenth Century and they used different formulations for different guns. The Brits put a lot of investment into gunpowder - they had an Empire to rule.

    Curtis's $ Harvey made an extremely good commercial canister powder they sold across the world under different guises - we knew it as 'Curtis's & Harvey #6'
    Sometime in the mid/later twentieth Century they sold the powder making equipment to Wano (Germany) and they continued the C&H #6, but using a different charcoal - and it was shit.

    The charcoal is the guts of any black powder - and buckthorn alder was King.
    And cooking it was all important ........... improper 'cooking' could turn the best wood into something incredibly average - I've done it.

    They have a competition over in the States where people fire golf balls out of mortars. Some of the homemade powders that are made today in the 'enthusiasts' garage blow any of the commercial makers into the sidelines - they're getting 'hang-times' no one's ever seen before.

    So - lot of experimentation to go yet, there will be formulations (not all powders are 75/15/10) and new charcoal woods that will exceed current knowledge - so, an interesting one to pursue
    rupert and Micky Duck like this.

  15. #30
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    Quite a few years ago the Rotorua Deerstalkers Club challenged the Blackpowder shooters from the club next door to a 'shoot'.
    I don't what the rules were, nor the ranges - all I did know was the NZDS chaps could use scopes .........

    And the BP boys cleaned them up
    Micky Duck likes this.

 

 

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