Steve Chapman and I compared notes last night and got some ideas together. We will probably use Steve's rifle because it already has mounts for high quality target sights. We have a couple of 1/16" liners to choose from. He also has a good ball patch combination in use which saves some experimentation.
We will incorporate a number of steps to rule out variables:
weighed charges and balls
uniform seating pressures
wiping between shots
etc
Steve will do the shooting as he is really tuned in to this rifle. After chrongraphing the the accuracy load we'll drillout the vent and chronograph again and measure the group. The results of this step will tell us what our next step will be.
We both have time issues that will delay this experiment for a time. THis isn't a cop-out; we both are really curious what we'll learn here. Our past experiments have been easier to get together on than this next one will be.
Regards,
Pletch
OK Pletch,
First play with piles of powder on sheets of white paper. Use a heated wire for ignition. First light a pile of powder in the center of the pile. Burning grains of powder will be ejected from the pile in a 360 degree circle. Then light another pile from one edge. You see the buring grains being blown away from the point of ignition in roughly a 280 degree to 300 degree direction.
An old QC test in powder plants was to place two measured samples of powder on a flat surface a certain distance apart. Then ignite one pile and see if the other pile ignites. Keep increasing the distance until the second pile does not auto-ignite.
Part of what this old test was looking at was ease of ignition of a specific sample of powder. This will be affected by the amount, or thickness, of glaze on the powder grains. For the same brand of powder. 2Fg will be harder to ignite compared to 3Fg. 1Fg will be harder to ignite compared to the 2F and 3F samples. The larger the grain size the thicker the "glaze".
An Aberdeen proving Ground BRL paper described the ignition of black powder grains as seen using high-speed photography.
Using a spark as with a flinter or a heated wire.
Where the heat source touches the surface of a grain there will be a small "puff" of "smoke" seen only with IR photography. This is a bit of water being vaporozed by the heat. Most of any water in the powder will be found trapped in the skin, or glaze" on the surface of the grains. A portion of the skin will be melted by the heat. The melted portion will then glow a dull orange or red color. Then you will see actual combustion of the powder grain begin.
The powder is 75%, or more, potassium nitrate. In order to gain ignition of the powder you must first heat a portion of that potassium nitrate, on the surface of the grains, to its melting point and then continue heating until you reach the decomposition temperature of the potassium nitrate where it will then evolve oxygen to promote/sustain additional powder combustion.
The Aberdeen papers also point out that black powder combustion is not influenced by pressure when it burns. Increasing the pressure in the container holding the powder does not increase the rate of ignition or combustion of the powder.
But with the relationship between heating and powder combustion the temperature of the powder charge at the time of ignition will effect how fast the charge ignites and burns. Simply due to the fact that you have to pump fewer calories of heat into the powder to get it up to the combustion temperature as promoted by the decomposition of the potassium nitrate.
Bill K.