I have no iron in this fire, either. I want to kow if it is not corrosive -ie: the marketer (Hodgdon makes NO powder- they sell it only) says this, "not as corrosive as black powder fouling" - I do not trust them, nor do I trust most mfg'rs. I already know chlorates are bad - perchlorates contains something like double or triple the oxygen of normal cholorate or something like that so more oxygen means to me, MORE oxidation, so I assume they are worse. What exactly does the per in trichlorate mean as opposed to chlorate. I asked a company if their phony powder had chlorates in it, no, they said in direct mail to me. Hodgdon then had it noted in an article in their manual, which said it contained perchlorate. So - no it doesn't have chlorate, it has perchlorate - see, they didn't lie - in their own mind - no, it wasn't Hodgdon. But see what I mean about mfgrs'? Which manufacturer doesn't make the biggest, fastest, slowest, cheapest, longest, whatever-est THING- just trust them, they wouldn't lie to you.
Obviously, I'm not a chemist. There are some things we know - we know chlorate primers (pre-non-corrosive primers)are corrosive - as they are/were blamed for rotting barrels for decades - oh no, corrosive primers - pitted the full length of the bore to deep pits full length - they then said, you have to clean with urine if no water available, etc, etc. Oils will not neutralize the corrosiveness of chorate fouling. People then as today, used motor oil - good stuff, yes - for your motor not so good for the rifle - the back-hills lubes were and even today, are used across North America. People think oil is oil.
So - how much chlorate is in a single rifle or shotgun primer - compared to how much cholorate or perchlorate in a 100gr. charge of phony powder? Remember, it's a powder that derives it's strength from the chlorates - OK - sorry - trichlorates? That's the sort of thing that gives me cause for pause. Maybe it was bad in ctg. guns because the people who owned them, didn't clean them properly - as we clean our BP guns- right- we all removed the barrels and flush clean? hmmm = = Of course, I well remember the gun writers telling us that Pyrodex (which also has chlorates or trichlorates) was not only like a smokeless for black, you didn't have to clean your gun after shooting it, it shot so cleanly. Well, we know how THAT went. Makes good copy and sells a LOT of phony powder - for a while.
What's good and what isn't?
We come to rely on people like MMonk - Ogre - people who've done the tests without a monetary iron in the fire.
I'm open to hearing some of the 'new' tests.
How about, how does the phony powder effect the various barrel steels commonly used - ie: how does it effect the various alloys and chemicals inside the steels?