Harnic - What load of T-7 are you shooting in your revolver. Maybe that stuff I tried was old or had absorbed moisture.
It did clean up easy. Anything we ought to know if I try it in the Rem 58 again?
T7 needs a magnum primer esp. with a patent breech (don't know what you have) -- you'll get slow and/or inconsistent ignition with "normal" primers. The Winchester Magnum BP primers that Walmart carries (the one choice) are good for 777, in addition to the brands others mentioned. I had switched to them before trying T7 after some trouble with CCI primers (high percentage of dud caps), but when I went back to some regular CCI primers in practice to use them up, the CCI's were regularly slow and inconsistent with the T7.
I really can't figure out why it was underpowered for you. T7 is definitely not weaker/slower than Goex -- probably it is more than comparable with Swiss. I used it for quite a while in a capgun to hoard BP and in lieu of BP when I couldn't get any, and it is very accurate when you find the right load and use a suitable primer. Except for the funny smell and high price (cmp'd to Goex), I don't find it lacking in any respect. There are a couple of other shooters in my club who had a similar (i.e. extended trial) experience with it and they have favorable reviews of it as well. One expressed dismay at the extra cleaning when he went back to BP. Anyway, I don't want to start a war over phony powders, blah, blah, blah, but T7 is in my opinion a viable alternative to BP with few if any significant disadvantages in a caplock and shouldn't be thrown out with the Pyrodex bathwater
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In reference to the original post, I used Pyrodex (both RS & P) some starting out (mainly because I didn't know how/where to get BP regularly) and I found it was about equal in performance and accuracy to Goex in equivalent granulation. It is, however, dirtier and more corrosive, and I don't think I knew the half of it at the time. I am reluctant to use it much anymore, but I do use some leftovers in a cheap pistol, where the barrel can be removed and dunked easily. The pistol doesn't appear to have any problems, but it doesn't get shot a whole lot. I expect hot primers would be good to try with Pyrodex also, as a new shooter one day at a match had some problems getting his rifle to go off fast using Pyrodex (and he had tried the obvious cleaning, etc.), but some magnum primers I still happened to have in my shooting box solved that issue for him. I can't remember, but I think he didn't want to try BP because he thought it would be too dirty
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