I tried to get some discussion on this back in 2014 (quoted below), but apparently that discussion had run it's course-- or I had bad stinky breath and no one wanted any more of that.
I have yet to have any thought or discovery displace this notion, and care not to test it. (At least not right now.)
But a comment by Mad Monk in that thread (below) and my personal recollection of
Grain Bin Explosions, allowed me to put "two and two together" in the logical sense for a
theory or notion of the actual mechanisms in place in these "mysterious" explosions which have no apparent source of ignition.
Grain-bin explosions happen world-wide, nearly every year since the development of industrial sized grain mills. The link in my 4-year-old quote is yet good, and of course we can find many more examples. There are tons of info and accounts on the causes/examples of dust-spark ignition of grain processing and other facilities where ANY sort or dust can be generated from anything of combustible materials.
Risking the "tired old repeat" tag, I'm bringing it up again so that in the very LEAST maybe some others will comment on it and most importantly HELP folks understand how to minimize their exposure to the conditions that can lead to "spontaneous" combustion of our flavor of gunpowder.
Possibly it goes further and some folks, taking proper precautions, test the theory and we get a controlled example that proves or disproves the theory.
Ultimately it might become "known fact" and some of the regulations on the handling of gunpowder would be changed, such that distributors would no longer have to follow over-zealous safety regulations. (But that might take a few decades or more)
To the point:
AS we've may have all seen- clean grains of gunpowder
defy ignition by electric spark on the youtube*. And thereby folks might erroneously think that
powder container explosions cannot be ignited by static. Yes, clean powder didn't ignite in that video. But put that same powder in a container and shake it up for a few weeks until some powder residue becomes suspended in the air (as might happen over a few years of our normal use and refilling) and then apply ANY size of spark. I think it will ignite. Same as wheat or corn or bean or wood dust.
*I went looking for that video and didn't see it: It was clean powder on paper, with clearly visible sparks bouncing off/through and no resultant ignition. (Maybe y'all remember it or can find it, or just trust me on that...)
I believe that our containers, with enough use and time and conditions might be accumulating fine particulate dust from vibrations and friction and wear on the screened powder, such that this dust, not gunpowder, could ignite and light the grain powder as well. SO I clean the residue out my powder flask now and then to prevent an accumulation of
fine dust that could possibly, in the right conditions become suspended in air and cause a miniature version of the grain bin/elevator explosion.
I could be all wet, but it doesn't stop me.
If there is/has been better (any) discussion of this subject, I'd be glad to look at it. tnx.
This thing about priming flasks and accidental ignition of the contents was looked at back in the mid-1980s... But then I found that the film sometimes contained actual powder dust. So an ignition of the powder dust build up around the spout could act as a fuse into the contents of the powder container.
The end result of all of that work was that it is a good idea to periodically clean the spouts and valves. No powder film means no fuse effect into the container.
Mad Monk
While i'm not the certified expert MM is, I did quickly associate accidental ignition of BP to the dust/powder of BP and not the granules. Just like corn/bean/wheat dust is what explodes grain bins-with purely organic dust and a simple spark.
Most recently http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2014/09/14/explosion-at-nestle-plant/15648861/
So every time I refill my brass canister, I wipe it clean of residue to help minimize this dust/powder. I'll now give the spout a little extra cleaning too. I don't use FFFF for anything these days either.
Ask the buck in the avatar if FF is "fast enough" for prime.