Is sal ammoniac what we know as ammonia??
Mike C
nope.
wiki:
It is commonly used to clean the soldering iron in the soldering of stained-glass windows. In both jewellery-making and the refining of precious metals, potassium carbonate is added to gold and silver in a borax-coated crucible to purify iron or steel filings that may have contaminated the scrap. It is then air-cooled and remelted with a one-to-one mixture of powdered charcoal and sal ammoniac to yield a sturdy ingot of the respective metal or alloy in the case of sterling silver (7.5% copper) or karated gold.
Sal ammoniac has also been used in the past in bakery products to give cookies a very crisp texture, although that application is rapidly dying due to the general disuse of it as an ingredient. However, in some areas of Europe, particularly Nordic countries and the Netherlands, it is still widely used in the production of salty licorice candy known as Salmiak or Salmiakki.[7]
Sal Ammoniac (ammonium chloride) was the electrolyte in Leclanche cells, a forerunner of the dry battery—where a carbon rod and a zinc rod or cylinder formed the electrodes.
Sal ammoniac is a rare mineral composed of ammonium chloride, NH4Cl. It forms colorless to white to yellow-brown crystals in the isometric-hexoctahedral class. It has very poor cleavage and a brittle to conchoidal fracture.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sal_ammoniacSomewhere i saw (saved i'm sure) a listing of all those "olde" chemical names and a/k/a's with their modern names-because all that changed back between then and now. Much of it anyway. Clyde Baker's 1935 book on gunsmithing uses the old names...that's where i first ran into mysterious chemicals and compounds. Bad news is you can't acquire them locally anymore, good news is that Ebay/Amazon/et al has plenty.
The last thing you want to do is try to make "sounds alike" guesses with this stuff. That could turn very nasty
pronto and schneller!