Not sure if this is the best place to post??
Does anybody have first hand information that caused explosions at black powder plants, other than smoking.
With today's modern equipment and safety standards, things should be better.
Fred
This could take awhile!!!
The thing with black powder plants is that no modern design machinery can really replace ALL of the old standard machinery. Only two exceptions of more modern machinery design that I am aware of. The standard plate and frame powder press is one item where modern designs work as well and then only one plant made the change. In the Swiss powder plant they built a roller powder press. The powder from the wheel mill is spread out on a rubber belt that takes the powder under a large roller that compacts it. When Hodgdon rebuilt a portion of the Minden plant they put a vertical vibrating screw conveyor in to feed broken up press cake powder up into the feed hopper for the corning mill. Replacing a system that used a wide leather belt with leather buckets attached. Mainly because these days getting somebody to make the belt and buckets is nearly impossible.
The first real danger point in the powder making process is when you have the three ingredients in the wheel mill. When they lay up the charge they add the potassium nitrate into the mill pan. Then lay on the mixture of sulfur and charcoal from the ball mill. Then pour onto that 10 pounds of water for every 100 pounds of powder in the mill. They may try to mix this up a bit by hand. They must insure that the pair of wheels are not resting on the metal bottom of the mill pan. Then starting up the mill and getting the rollers turning is critical. If the wheel are on the metal mill pan they will simply slide and cause an explosion. So the mill is started on a very slow speed. This helps mix the water into the ingredients. Then part of the way through the milling time the operator must shut down the mill to look at how moist the mix is in the pan. Adding water if necessary. If the mix gets too dry in the pan it will blow up.
Back in the old days the Germans would use sheep skins with the fleece side up on the floors of the wheel mill buildings. Changing them once a shift to be washed. Hob nail boots were out of the question in the powder plant. They wore special foot gear. Here in the U.S. most of the wheel mill houses, in the late 1800s, had special spark proof lineoleum flooring.
Going to take a break here.
Bill K.