Your warning might be heeded better if you turned on spell check.
You could be a nuclear scientist... but if you spell like a hillbilly...folks judge that sort of thing.
...Did you actually read the post? Including the title?
Your warning might be heeded better if you turned on spell check.
You could be a nuclear scientist... but if you spell like a hillbilly...folks judge that sort of thing.
Hi guys. After years of reloading I had many live rounds at first year that I had problems with , some didn't go into chamber , some bad shape and form , some wrong load data and.....
I decided to unload them all , over 100 rounds.
Now I have almost 1lb powder.
All were loaded for 308
Bullets 147 fmj 168 and 175 smk
And mixed brass.
Now I have 1lb powder mixed
As long as remember my guess is approx
40% varget
30% 4895 imr
2% bcl2
20% 4064
8% reloader 15
Any luck or chance that I can reuse them ?
When manufacturers determine burn rates for powders do they use this method that you describe?
...or is this just something that you've done before ?
...or is this just something you thought of when you read this thread ?
Hi guys. After years of reloading I had many live rounds at first year that I had problems with , some didn't go into chamber , some bad shape and form , some wrong load data and.....
I decided to unload them all , over 100 rounds.
Now I have almost 1lb powder.
All were loaded for 308
Bullets 147 fmj 168 and 175 smk
And mixed brass.
Now I have 1lb powder mixed
As long as remember my guess is approx
40% varget
30% 4895 imr
2% bcl2
20% 4064
8% reloader 15
Any luck or chance that I can reuse them ?
Yeah, no Manufacturers get one of their oldest employee from the plant, get him to chew on new freshly produced batch and then ask him to eat batch from previous run to compare. Then a sample from competition to determine if their is faster or slower. That's how they actually determine how fast or slow their powder batch turned up.
In all seriousness though, how do you think they determine burn rate without actually burning it? by Taste? by smell?
Of course they burn it - I don't ever recall saying they didn't burn it.
But your previous post mentioned something about a "clean surface and 5 inch line of powder" for a test?
Could it be a 4.5 inch line ?.... 2 ? ... how thick is this line?
Sit there with a stopwatch to time how fast each pile burns and draw inference from that data ?
Difference in burn rates are likely in milliseconds to the naked eye ?
Gewehr can argue his own case here, but what you've written shows you've never actually burned powder in the open. I've burned fast/slow powder from pulldowns, and it's quite obvious.
..... In all seriousness though, how do you think they determine burn rate without actually burning it? by Taste? by smell?
I've burned various piles of waste powder in the past -but admittedly I've never tried to compare times before.
If somepne can prove to me that the laboratory conditions that manufactures use to determine rates is similar to the conditions described in post # 25 ... then I will gladly use ketchup while eating a plate of crow.


Of course they burn it - I don't ever recall saying they didn't burn it.
But your previous post mentioned something about a "clean surface and 5 inch line of powder" for a test?
Could it be a 4.5 inch line ?.... 2 ? ... how thick is this line?
Sit there with a stopwatch to time how fast each pile burns and draw inference from that data ?
Difference in burn rates are likely in milliseconds to the naked eye ?
If one wanted to experiment with this Franken Powder, then I would suggest loading something safe like 30 grains of varget in to a case...
This would be the "Control Case" shoot it a measure velocity.
Then load 30 grain into the same case (use primer and projectile from same lots of the control) with the Franken Powder.... shoot and record velocity.
Divide the FrankenPowder velocity by the control velocity... you now have more appropriate expectation of how the powder will work relative to varget.... one could adjust established tables for varget with this ratio.
An even better approach would be just discard the Frankenpowder all together .... becuase even if it didn't turn one's gun into an IED (sans remote detonator).. then I would gues the powder would perform like crap as the powder may settle unevenly in one's trickler/thrower and and produce velocity spreads all over the place.
By no means what I suggested is the most definitive test, you can do same as in this video, which is useless as it only burns in one spot, but you get the idea.
As for how thick and how wide its up to tester to decide. I only suggested 10 grains 5 inches. If you wish you can put more and longer strand, get stop watch, put high speed camera on it and count still frames while it burns. record humidity, wind speed?
Its a rabbit hole, you really want op to go there for just a pound of mixed powder?
keep it simple.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IGZCwqffEx0
I feel like the guy was flaunting how rich he is by lining up his powder collection!
I have to admit .... that was an interesting video to watch.
I feel like the guy was flaunting how rich he is by lining up his powder collection!
I agree with keeping it simple.
Thats why if I were in the OP's situation, then I wouldn't even bother reloading with this powder.
I'd wait until it was winter, build a snowman at the range, mix this Frankenpowder in with some tannerite (to see if it enhances the fireball effect) and nuke the snowman at 100 + yards.




























