This explains the earthquake this morning! Must've been a million Fudds stomping their feet, knowing with 100 % fuddlore certainty what's gonna happen.
@@Everythingblackpowder , How would it have worked with a filler or wad on top of just the smokeless powder. Would compressing the powder against the cap have increased the amount burned?
I suppose it would’ve allowed it to make more pressure and burn more of the smokeless, but it didn’t help all that much when we seated the ball all the way against the unique
@@Everythingblackpowder Given that you're getting the cap spitting the ball into the forcing cone without touching off the powder, _potentially_ you could force the pressure to build more by using a slightly larger ball, but that's very much a *'From Behind A Tree With A String'* kind of idea. Or do it with a cheap musket build kit you don't care too much about, with the long and enclosed barrel it might work better, but still with the whole string and tree thing.
That’s what I always thought. It’s more an issue of modern revolver rounds only need like 4-10 grains depending on cartridge but cap and ball revolvers are made to hold 30 grains
I think that's definitely where it came from. Used to be for reloading with black powder, the case length determined the amount. You stuffed the case full, jammed the bullet on top, and away you go. Do that with fancy new smokeless(especially early smokeless), kaboom.
I was way ahead as "I Know the cu of avalible charge space per bullet style per gun cylinder's average, but not each of six, do math, fill with diy oiled flower or corn? or such, no balls may move? Not dead space? my charge is ratio mixed of one final in field measured charge. more testing soon. but I will not make "my own" DV!
Yep 12 grains of smokeless will blow the cylinder apart! Ask me how I know lol. Yes I knew what I was doing black powder guy over 50 years. Had a worn out navy wanted to see what would happen. It was done remotely but had somebody been holding it would have been catastrophic!
The 16" powder bags were 600 pounds of smokeless, and TEN pounds of Black on the AFT end. The primer ignited the BLACK powder first. I was a BT on the USS New Jersey 1985-1987.
You're right about artillery using BP to set off the real charge--in fact, that's *exactly* what Goex is formulated for (Brett Gibbons is an Ordnance Dept. officer and he talks about this in his video about BP). I saw an article on a web site years ago from a guy who talked about how to develop a smokeless load for BP weapons, so I knew this could be done safely, but I think the real issue is that we have to tell people not to do it to keep some Gomer from overdoing it, and I *know* for a fact, have seen the test results showing it, that heavier charges can blow up revolvers, splitting the chambers wide open. But you always have to tailor everything to the lowest common denominator, and it's easier to say "you can't do this" than it is to say "well, you can do this if you're careful, and if your weapon is in good shape, and if your weapon doesn't have a tiny flaw (which we don't test for because it won't matter if you use it the way we said to), etc., etc. Besides, BP is just more fun! Nice to see you continuing to cause people's heads to explode, however--you do love stirring the shit! I am *not* however, going to read the comments below, though, because I'm not sure my blood pressure meds will be able to handle that.
When I used to do this kind of stuff, back before the web was invented, I used to tie the gun to a fence post and pull the trigger with a string. And it worked, bc I still have all ten fingers! 🙂
When smokeless powder was introduced, the priming compounds of the time didn't work ideally. 22 match ammo for example was not so accurate with smokeless. They found that if they mixed the ingredients of both black and smokeless into something called semi-smokeless or the trade name Lesmok, they got clean, uniform burning and only a little more powder fowling than straight smokeless.
George Frost discovered early in the conversion to smokeless for 22lr, that crimp pressure was the key. He started measuring the "pull weight" of his rimfire cartridges and came up with about 45lb pull weight being the ideal. Depending on the powder, it still is. When using a very fast powder like bullseye pull weight is not nearly as critical, but because of the nature of it's burn rate, that fast of a powder is not ideal for 22lr. A medium burn powder with a heavier crimp works best.
I want to thank you all for another interesting and informative video! I have seen people have success with 5 gr. Of clays with corn meal filler,but no crony to check velocity. Thanks again! 👍🤠
You are spot on with your thinking. Ido that all the time with BP subs, use 2-3 grains of BP to ignite a stubborn charge. I am currently testing a variant of commercial Blue MZ, a sodium benzoate fuel based powder, which i call Grey MZ. Dextrin in the Blue is replaced with NC lacquer at 8-9% as binder in the Grey. I add 3% charcoal to the benzoate to improve ignition. 28 gr of Grey MZ blew up the cylinder on my Remington Sheriff, but examination showed the cylinder was a casting (Pietta). 30-35gr of Grey MZ through the ROA will give 1000+ fps with conicals and it digests these loads with ease. Thing about what we are getting into with these type of loads, low pressure in a BP revolver chamber. Load these in cartridges and ignition and velocity dramatically improve. Screw the naysayers...never know till you try
I've seen videos where they stuffed unbelievable amounts of black in a rifle and the results were a tremendous amount of recoil, enough to break the stock in the fixture it was in, but no damage to the barrel itself. I've also seen a demonstration of how dangerous it is to put smokeless powder in a black powder rifle. It took a ridiculous amount of smokeless powder to blow up that rifle, but when it did finally blow, it was catastrophic, a bomb to say the least. I'm not going to try either, but many old black powder rounds were and still are loaded with smokeless powder. To agree with you, I think it's all common sense, how much of which.
What I found to be cool about this was that it kept the revolver a lot cleaner than if full black powder was used. So, the smokeless did its job. When you got the process figured out, the little bit of black behind the larger charge of smokeless and tight seating the ball, well, that was a load that was up where .38 Special and .45 ACP are operating. Not too shabby!
I love that someone actually tested this out, I can’t see a practical reason to load this way but I do see the appeal of getting 800+ fps out of 1/3rd the total powder you’d normally need to launch a .44 round ball. So maybe a good thing to know in a powder shortage
I think this lore is mainly a holdover from when people were still getting used to smokeless. People would try to load smokeless like black powder - just fill the chamber and cram the bullet on top. You'd get 20-30 grains of smokeless and that will indeed blow the thing up. On the other hand, if you use about the same quantity of smokeless as you would in a similar-volume cartridge, it should be able to handle it. Put some filler on top to keep the powder down by the flash hole and that should get it to go off. Now, I'd only try that in a modern repro that's in good shape. But it's definitely not impossible.
@@vicroc4 I did an experiment with pyrodex RS. I filled 06 casings to the shoulders loaded 150 gr bullets,and fired them. Accuracy was good, primers and casings indicted a full power loading pressure appeared consistent..volocity appeared high. It did smoke a lot.
I reload rimfire ammo with smokeless. I have found that unless you crimp them so there is an initial containment for pressure in the case it won't burn well at all. Sometimes not at all. It is the initial containment that makes the difference. A 22lr loaded with HS-6 needs a crimp pull weight of over 25lbs to begin to perform correctly...if that helps. Conversely, 22lr loaded with black does not need ANY crimp. Smokeless needs pressure to create pressure.
I used 12 grains of e3 for our Diablo m/l 12g. pistol. I couldn't use less because this volume ensured I did not have any airspace. e3 is #4 on the burn-rate chart, Unique is a bit slower at #31. Airspace and smokeless, in my experience at least, will prevent enough PRESSURE to build up for the powder to ignite, it seems the airspace absorbs some of the pressure. It's possible you could have used an inert buffer (like coffee grounds or a wad) on top of the smokeless and it would have ensured you didn't have an airgap.
@@Everythingblackpowder It's good for really lightweight stuff, the slug can weigh only 5 grams and it will still ignite. If I used a slower powder like Longshot for something 3/4 of an ounce or less it won't ignite at all
4.5 gn of Unique sounds like a mild load in 9mm Para with a 124 gn bullet. In .38 SPL, with 148 grain wadcutters, anything much slower than "Bullseye" will NOT burn fully. As the primer goes off and the powder starts to "ignite" the bullet moves forward, ESPECIALLY the polymer-coatedtype. This effectively increases the combustion-chamber volume ans LOWERS pressure. In turn, quite a lot of the initial tiddly powder charge does NOT ignite; it just leaves unburned powder all over the insides of the gun. Years ago I had a Smith and Wesson Model 52; the semi-auto .38 SPL wadcutter target pistol. With Unique, I just got a gun full of unburned powder and bullets downrange. All that detritus simply slowed the cycling to the point it stopped functioning. After a few "interesting" range sessions. I came to the conclusion that the best powder would be a "fast" one. They don't get much faster than "Bullseye". It was a revelation. Consistent velocities, reliable operation and hits on the 25yd target: WINNER. SO...... How far down the cylinder do you ram the balls? If the powder is sloshing around in that comparatively large .44 chamber, I can understand why ignition with pure smokeless is "erratic", at best. How "hot' re the specified "percussion caps, compared to center-fire pistil primers? LOTS of variables in the air in this project. BUT, somebody had to ask..............And here you are!
WELL DONE Jake .. So far the comments are sensible & lacking the expected outrage eh. You reminded me of 'LESMOK' that was used mostly as a .22 Rimfire load from around 1900 up to 1947 - a semi-smokeless mix of BP with 10-20% nitrocellulose - so it has all been done before by professionals. I guess the "issue" mostly is in the variables such as old weak guns and WEAK BRAINS that lack caution and not so common COMMON SENSE ?
My uncles use to do this ,combination for hunting I never heard of not using smokeless my family has always done it. They also have pinched the caps thats how I was taught .the thing I learn watching your videos love them .
The other odd load is 1/5 real black on the bottom, Before the dex if your not running extra hot caps or have failure to ignite. The black on the bottom goes easier, its less stable. I mostly know flintlocks and never ran dex as kid. Just something I remember reading in the one book thats like 100 bucks now. The name is in the other post.
Some time ago I had a 1873 trapdoor, and all my loading books cautioned to only use the specified .45/70 trapdoor loads only. But at the bottom of this 1940 NRA load chart it listed a duplex load of 50 gr. FFg w/ 10gr. of IMR4895. I got 60 pieces of brass w/ the rifle, and rolled up 20 rnds w/ 70gr of Goex. After the 8th or 9th shot the brass started to stick in the chamber and I used the rod bayonet to get them out. Then rolled 20 more w/ BP/4895. What a joy. Shot that 20 and the bore and in side the brass was a thin, dry, light gray deposit. I run a load similar to yours in my .44 rem and colt. So nice to run 2 or 3 wheels and not have a gummy gun.
Not just naval guns but all artillery rounds. blackpowder is used to ignite the smokeless powder. Keep in mind that the grains size of the smokeless powder is about the size of your little finger nail cubed
Hi, here in the UK we have somewhat restrictive legislation around handguns... We are allowed to have muzzle loading revolvers though, and we have developed muzzle loaders that use smokeless powder and 209 primers!
I had an old Iver Johnson 16 gauge Shotgun I picked up at a swap n shop, the guy I bought it off of knew nothing about it, it was in rough shape. I went to Cabella's and bought some 16 gauge #7 target load, and put many rounds through the old gun.. I took it to a buddy of mine, who has a firearm training school (yes we have them in Canada). Anyways, he had a friend of his there on this day, who knew old & classic firearms, and told me that it was an made between 1909 & 1919 black powder rifle, and I was incredibly lucky it didn't blow up on me.
You did better than other attempts I’ve seen at trying to duplex load blackpowder/smokeless. Usually either not enough velocity or getting into explosive cylinder range. I guess the powder/caliber choice. 861 fps is great, but I think I would prefer to overload blackpowder, as far as safety is concerned.
I came in late, but caught most of the experiment. Interesting! Was thinking that perhaps a cream of wheat filler might help those deep seated loads. Thanks for the non sucky video, Jake!!
Backyard Ballistic, the professional firearms examiner and legal expert, did a similar video a few years ago but from a much more technical standpoint. Yours from more practical side.
ignition issues: use a filler (cotton fluff for example) between the projectile and the cap. It'll keep the powder against the cap for ignition inside the chamber.
That was my first reaction, however, that is not the problem here, if you load 5 gr of smokeless in a 45 Colt there is a huge amount of air space inside, exactly the same as in this experiment, I believe the problem is the lack of pressure due to the open hole in the nipple, a 45 Colt cartridge is a sealed chamber that allows pressure to build up inside, in this experiment the smokeless is in an open chamber, just like burning out in the open, it does not explode. Stay safe! Chris B.
You were close enough to a 50/50 mix. Make yourself a batch of powder and mix it 50/50 by weight with smokeless. Load straight from the flask 25-30 grains per chamber compressed load on your 44. Would be interesting to do a full load and having the powder mixed ahead instead of loading separately
Wonder how it would act if the powders are mixed together well. Instead of in layers. I am sure its probably doing that to some extent....best quote all Week. Jake 28:02 "Smokeless performs very lame"
I have a nitro converted Ruger Old Army. It uses shotgun primers to set off the Nitro powder. Another UK nitro converted BP revolver company (Anvil Conversions) also uses Shotgun primers.
Excellent video. Love to see a follow up with an inline rifle using modern primers. Maybe copy 50-70 loads and seat the projectile with the same depth as the cartridge. All the destruction testing I've seen with muzzle loaders used wildly inappropriate loads for even a modern rifle.
I have never posted on your site before but have been watching you guys for quite a while now. Got to say, I have learned more from your experiments and testing than any other source. Fact be known, I modeled my powder processing on all the time and hard work you guys put in to making a powder that is as good, or better than what you can buy, it works!!! Thanks so much for the time yall put in to give all of us an alternative to buying BP that is now so expensive, if you can even get it. I can tell you here in Texas, a pound of Swiss is not even available in any shop, and if you buy it online with the hazmat shipping charge it will cost you $75 or better for a pound! I have recently switched to brass media in my tumbler and man what a difference! So much cleaner than lead balls. Again, thanks so much for your willingness to give your knowledge freely!
I didn't expect the Unique not to ignite. My guess was that a less energetic flake powder would work better, like Red Dot or Green Dot. But not if it won't ignite with the caps. Duplex loads are likely the way to go, but I would still worry about peak pressure. Black powder has a great burn curve when compressed.
@Everything Black Powder Guys, thank you for all your work and sharing, I really do appreciate it. When you were evoking the pain to layer the two different powders, I was wondering if when equal parts it wouldn't work reasonably well to just have the mixed beforehand, you know... less work and all that.
4.5 grains of Hodgson's Clays with a cornmeal to keep the powder at the flash hole works great in a cap n ball revolver. Only concern for cleaning is the residue from the cap.
I have been using 4f black and triple 777 2f for years now. One for cost and more energy. A can of 4f will give thousands of shots when you're using 4-5 grains per shot. Triple 7 77 I can buy anywhere. Smokeless needs a heck of a hot spark to light. So, to improve ignition, I started using 4f from my pan charger down the barrel of my flintlock guns .or percussion. I use a brass tube to get my 4f to the back of the barrel where I want it with no waste. Than my triple 777 on top. But you do need a gun with a patent breech plug for best performance. Any gun with just a hole in the side of the barrel is not ideal. A bess, for example .A cap and ball is just an inline ignition and ideal for duplex loads. But use your head or lose it, folks😂
There are many who comment by repeating things they have heard on UA-cam and read in forums and have never even fired a gun of any type. They repeat cause they think something sounds smart. Iraqveteran 8888 did an interesting video a few years ago showing what it really took to damage a black powder rifle including smokeless and barrel instructions. The result was surprising. Keep up the videos.
that compressed load of smokeless really got me on the edge of my seat! thank you for your bravery (or perhaps stupidity?) in doing these experiments for us. i was sure that a compressed load of 4.5 grains of unique like that would totally screw up the pressure curve and blow the gun up. maybe it's just that your gun's steel is tougher than what they had historically, but im pretty sure a compressed smokeless load, historically, would have blown a gun up. tbh if anything could blow up a gun it would be a compressed load of pistol powder like that. scary stuff! thanks for showing us how variable these ratios and pressures can be while remaining surprisingly safe.
Cool video, if the powder ignites when its fully mixed you will probably get a more consistent velocity assuming the recoil is not shifting the projectile. That way you could just make a batch and not have to worry about making a mistake out in the field.
The same concept is used in 16"-50 naval guns. A small amount of black powder (360 grams) is used in the rearmost bag to ensure ignition of the D846 propellant.
Im shocked and distraught. Gunpowder in a gun shoots perfectly fine... My uncle's brother's buddy had a roommate in the 70s whos grandad shot a lot of BP and he said smokeless powder would never work in a gun!!!!
My "neighbors bird dog" told me his old master blew up, smelled like smokeless in the morning. Darn dog would only talk with me after his trama, I smell like eggs.
I used to load lite 44 mag loads for shooting matches. Dont rem the load but it was a very small amt of Winchester 231. There was a large free one space in the case i took up with dacron pillow fill. Worked good, even had a muffling effect.
So normally I look at unique as something relatively easy to ignite and volume agnostic (I run 12g of unique in a 45-70 case, which means tons of empty space). But of course that's with a far stronger primer. I think that you're right on the powder speculation: Something super fast and again relatively volume agnostic (bullseye, titegroup, etc) might be easier to ignite, and therefore produce better results. Interesting results, most of my reloading is with more forgiving powders that don't care as much about primers and this sort of thing refocuses my attention to how primers can impact things that I normally don't pay much attention to.
In my Marlyn Guide Gun and my speghetti Sharps, I have loaded 14 grains of Unique with excellent results. If your worried about dead air space use a small tuff of dacron filler and push it down onto the powder.
That was a lot of fun just to watch. Done something along the lines of that in my Hawken rifle with win. 296 with about the same results. OUTSTANDING VIDEO.
Wow man, my dad said they did that smokeless behind black up in the mountains of Colorado, where it could would and did get down to -30. Dad also ran modern magnum shotgun shells in an old LeFever Damascus barrel black powder shotgun. My uncle f'ed the barrel up more with a car door than my dad ever did. Dad may have broken an internal part, or it could have be metal fatigue. The flat springs do look crystallized and the tips are gone. Now to piss you off. My other uncle was running coyote traps and found an old cap and ball up in the east Utah high desert when he checked to see what metal item the tie & drag chain had hit in the grass. For all you PETA people, loads of those leghold traps were stamped US government property.
I did this more than 30 years ago when I run out of black powder and there wasn't anywhere I could get some without travelling for some hours, but had a bag of blanks - 7.62×51mm NATO - from my Military service. Although I didn't use it in a revolver, I used it in a Pedersoli Hawken cap-lock rifle. Worked just fine and didn't do any damage to the rifle.
Theory....... The tiny hole in the nipple limits the flash to the extent that the smokeless won't ignite. The flash hole in a metallic cartridge is much larger. The ball cannot be pushed into the cylinder far enough to take up the air space and put the powder right near the priming flash. I did read many years ago that the Brits did this with fairy dust but used a filler to hold the powder at the back of the cylinder. To generate the full performance and MV of BP, smokeless would need over twice the peak pressure, and that might damage the pistol. I have seen a Remington taken apart by a full charge of smokeless... the Utuber "Cap'n'ball" did a video on it. Not sure what the powder was from memory..... The big "Kaboom" seems to be the product of a full charge of smokeless which would be an overload in a cartridge such as a 45 Colt in any case. A thought occurs.... why not blend a bit of smokeless with the BP, use normal charges (say up to 25) so loading would be easy and run very clean....
Caps also aren't sealed into a case forcing all of the primer energy down the flash hole.. the bp flash hole has to be small as it's a pressure vent to the chamber. A cartridge flash hole doesn't need to hold pressure to launch a projectile so it can be larger.
Overall, I'm impressed with your understanding of ballistics for a woman, but you never want to pre-mix smokeless with black powder. The reason being is the densities are different and you will get inconsistent loads every single time inevitably. This will range from huge swings in velocity all the way to potential kaboom. Bye bye gun and possibly fingers 😮
@@panchopistola8298 try it for yourself. Mix smokeless powder and black powder in a bag and shake it up. It doesn't mix well is what I'm saying If there's a better way to do it than the guy is doing in the video that I'm all ears, but pre-mixing it together in a bag is not the way. Also you don't know what I know dummy
Mr. Everything- Applause for your experimentation! As long as the revolver did not dis-assemble itself and your finger count is the same pre- and post-experiment it seems like some duplex loads may not be as dangerous as advertised. For me though I reckon that I will stay with using black powder in my black powder revolvers (I've got cartridge revolvers for smokeless powder). Bob
You should be out there busting more of these myths. Should make a video about how easy it is to scratch the barrel with the ramrod without a bore guide
Makes me wince every time a u tube shooter throws the ramrod in and out vigorously then trys to shoot for a group! The rifleing at the muzzle gets such a battering. Plastic covered ramrods if you want your gun to last 👍
Well if life wasn't hard it would be easy. And Jake, like me you probably weren't brought up easy. So Hard should be just about normal. Right? You guys are great keep up the good work
I was really surprised you never thought to use filler. I use used coffee grounds to fill up the empty space. Then the ball seats normally and holds the powder in place - even more important with these duplex loads. Also seating the ball that deep means it has a big jump before it hits the rifling - so accuracy probably was not great.
If you don't seat the bullet all the way against the powder no need for fillers, an empty space is nothing alarming really but I agree I "feels" more right. Never happened to me though I always fill my cylinders because my BP is not very dense
@@yannickramouillet3742 In this case it would be to hold the black powder and smokeless in their relative positions to each other. Basically Triplex. WAY too much work to be practical for anything but fun. There are other compositions you can use which are neither black powder OR smokeless, but this isn't he place for that.
I once used 10 grains of shotgun powder in a .45 cal Kentucky rifle. It worked just fine. It came from some old Winchester shotgun shells with the paper case. They were my grandpa's shells.
What's interesting is that the military still technically used black powder for applications similar to in this video. It's used as a primary explosive to set off other propellants/explosives with higher activation energies. what you're basically doing is making a more powerful (corrosive) cap.
Don't you guys know that doing that will cause your kids to be born nekid? I know a guy who does this and I have even tried it myself using the same loads he uses (2.5 gr Bullseye .380 ball 36 caliber) but I just don't want to risk it, if I intend to use smokeless loads in my BP revolver I will use a conversion cylinder and it's stronger steel. Even just 2.5 to 3 gr Bullseye and a round ball can make a lot of pressure so I personally won't be doing that anymore, still you guys are doing a great service (notice I didn't say DIS-service!) to the BP community by bringing this out into the open with a common sense discussion and demonstration. There have been several smokeless-in-BP videos using rifles that were loaded to destruction with smokeless, usually after several tries it finally ends by using an INSANE smokeless powder load for any gun and with two or more balls rammed on top of it! Then when the darn thing FINALLY gives up and bursts open we are then told "see there DON'T use smokeless in your BP firearm"! Where are these videos? I don't want to start anything by specifically picking on anyone's video but a quick search should locate a couple of them. Hey that gun you used ain't correct because a 44 caliber Navy was never,,,,, wait, I seem to remember that someone might have already said that!
Love this test I use have same gun & wondered this & on caps try using size 10 caps if your using a 11 cap now I switch to 10 caps was more reliable these was same great test I like
I love Unique. It's a very forgiving powder, and if I could only have one powder to load with, it would be Unique. As you found out though, Unique does not like light loadings. It doesn't burn completely and leaves a mess. It is definitely happier with medium to stout loads. Good Video!
great experiment, learned alot i figured it'd either squib or blow up. glad it didnt blow up on ya man! beautiful truck too! such a vibe blackpowder shooting in the old school pickup
@@dmre0 to use smokeless powder in black powder guns you must pretend that you're loading smokeless powder cartridges. Your gun is the cartridge casing. As with all reloading you must pay attention to what your doing,and don't break the rules. Too much, too little wrong powder , wrong seating deapth.💣🪦 Things can get out of hand very easily.small mistakes have big results.
I have never needed anything stronger than 777s in cap locks. I would say try this with trail boss, but i think trail boss went out of business. ... on a side note, thats a pretty cool old truck, and i think it would be great if you would show it to us sometime. Great video, as always !
@@Everythingblackpowdermaybe you should wear a helmut or other protective gear when experimenting? Id hate to see the videos stop because of an injury.
That's an interesting point, Trail Boss is a purposely low bulk density smokeless powder. Ive put 14g of Trail Boss through an Ruger Old Army with conicals, 1300+ fps. Not worried about the frame or cylinder, my thought is blowing out the nipple threads.
(Setting aside fools that don't adjust the quantity when switching powders.) Most smokeless actually has a smoother pressure curve shape that is less hard on the gun for a given potential energy. Black tends to spike the pressure really hard at the start then taper off.
The guy that taught me how to blackpowder shoot used to use 2400 in his .54 as a deer load....he always said 2400 had the same pressure curve as black powder when loaded to the same velocity with the same bullet.....dunno how much truth there was to that theory but considering i have that rifle now it didn't do it any harm
Ive used true blue powder for this. It works but i didnt do a torture test. I think if the pistols can handle the conversion cylinders the only thing i see being an issue is the piette or uberti cylinders are made of questionable chinese metal.
As a kinda fudd, what i was always told about this was people were loading smokeless (by volume), with the same amount as they would black. For instance, 20gr of unique. And then blowing up their guns. My grandfather told me about duplex loads, for black powser cartridge guns. It could also possibly have started with semi smokless powder, the lore that is.
Considering Estes Energetics (which owns GOEX) has used "military contracts" as the excuse for why only small amounts of powder are coming to retailers, I suspect they do.
I have a original 1851 Colt Navy with one cylinder that was bulged and cracked. This is a family heirloom that my ancestor carried in the US Civil War. A long time ago one of my uncles did the dirty deed with smokeless powder. When I was younger my dad showed me the gun and explained how it was damaged. I wish I knew what powder and how much was used. Dad then carefully heated the bulge and with a press slowly pushed the cylinder bulge back in. Shape was restored also the engraved scene on the cylinder was saved. We never fired the gun.
Well ACTUALLY Colt DID experiment with a 44 1851 and at least one prototype was indeed made. I have an extensive collection of Italian clones including a couple of "fantasy" guns. Great vid Jake. You are a better man then I :)
Thank you for thinking outside the box, and taking reasonable risks to help us all know more about our guns and what they can do. I agree that the deviation in fps is probably from the ball moving forward a smidge and loosing a little compression. Yes they do still use a little bp in naval gun charges.
It makes sense when you think about it, if you keep the loads *reasonable* and don't load 30 grains by volume of smokeless.. it should be fine... The issue when you have "the lowest common denominator" loading it up, thinking they're using BP and throwing in a huge load like 30grains of smokeless in, that would make even some center fire rifles cry. Savage made an inline muzzleloader that was "rated" for smokeless years back, and you could load either BP or smokeless as you saw fit, with recommended loads. I think a load in 45 colt is like 6-8 grains of unique? 45 colt has a pressure of something like ~14k CUP, and BP can be anywhere between 12 and 20, sometimes more in larger guns. I think if you stick to "cowboy loads" and use just a tad bit of common sense, it wouldn't kill you. Might have to try a tad larger load, but slap some cotton or other wadding in there to keep the powder right up against the hole and maybe try a larger heavier bullet to give it time to build more pressure?
Just need a hotter cap. My muzzle loading savage ml10 is made to shoot smokeless powder and works fine but it uses a shotgun primer and I belive it came with the set up to use a hot traditional cap as well. So really I bet 2 grains of black powder should set it off on the caps your using till you can get the hotter caps.
This explains the earthquake this morning! Must've been a million Fudds stomping their feet, knowing with 100 % fuddlore certainty what's gonna happen.
😂
😂😂
@@Everythingblackpowder , How would it have worked with a filler or wad on top of just the smokeless powder. Would compressing the powder against the cap have increased the amount burned?
I suppose it would’ve allowed it to make more pressure and burn more of the smokeless, but it didn’t help all that much when we seated the ball all the way against the unique
@@Everythingblackpowder Given that you're getting the cap spitting the ball into the forcing cone without touching off the powder, _potentially_ you could force the pressure to build more by using a slightly larger ball, but that's very much a *'From Behind A Tree With A String'* kind of idea.
Or do it with a cheap musket build kit you don't care too much about, with the long and enclosed barrel it might work better, but still with the whole string and tree thing.
Tune in next week when Willard runs with scissors.
😂
Run with the blades closed in your hand. I did this once in front of my art teacher and he died laughing.
🤣👍
I read that and thought of Edward's scissors' hands.
@@1885win I've had similar results
Where people get into trouble is when they load smokeless with a black powder measure and fill the cylinder 😮
Yep. The difference in volume is an important concern.
That’s what I always thought. It’s more an issue of modern revolver rounds only need like 4-10 grains depending on cartridge but cap and ball revolvers are made to hold 30 grains
I think that's definitely where it came from. Used to be for reloading with black powder, the case length determined the amount. You stuffed the case full, jammed the bullet on top, and away you go.
Do that with fancy new smokeless(especially early smokeless), kaboom.
I was way ahead as "I Know the cu of avalible charge space per bullet style per gun cylinder's average, but not each of six, do math, fill with diy oiled flower or corn? or such, no balls may move? Not dead space? my charge is ratio mixed of one final in field measured charge. more testing soon. but I will not make "my own" DV!
Yep 12 grains of smokeless will blow the cylinder apart! Ask me how I know lol. Yes I knew what I was doing black powder guy over 50 years. Had a worn out navy wanted to see what would happen. It was done remotely but had somebody been holding it would have been catastrophic!
US Navy powder bags for the old battleships had quilted black powder patches on the front side to ensure good ignition of the smokeless.
Red bags!
Thank you
Artillery shells still use black power to ignite the rest of the charge. Its the only reason goex is still in business.
The 16" powder bags were 600 pounds of smokeless, and TEN pounds of Black on the AFT end. The primer ignited the BLACK powder first. I was a BT on the USS New Jersey 1985-1987.
@@someguy325es Plus the thousands of people that use Goex in their blackpowder firearms.
Cap & Ball torture
Nothing like a little CBT to start the day off
Omfg😂
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
😅
BWAHAHA
You're right about artillery using BP to set off the real charge--in fact, that's *exactly* what Goex is formulated for (Brett Gibbons is an Ordnance Dept. officer and he talks about this in his video about BP). I saw an article on a web site years ago from a guy who talked about how to develop a smokeless load for BP weapons, so I knew this could be done safely, but I think the real issue is that we have to tell people not to do it to keep some Gomer from overdoing it, and I *know* for a fact, have seen the test results showing it, that heavier charges can blow up revolvers, splitting the chambers wide open. But you always have to tailor everything to the lowest common denominator, and it's easier to say "you can't do this" than it is to say "well, you can do this if you're careful, and if your weapon is in good shape, and if your weapon doesn't have a tiny flaw (which we don't test for because it won't matter if you use it the way we said to), etc., etc. Besides, BP is just more fun! Nice to see you continuing to cause people's heads to explode, however--you do love stirring the shit! I am *not* however, going to read the comments below, though, because I'm not sure my blood pressure meds will be able to handle that.
Thanks, Hugh
He does love to do that lol
Italian replicas have their barrels proofed for smokeless. You can use factory ammo with cartridge conversion cylinders.
Yes but in this case the cylinder is the weak point.
@@Everythingblackpowdermore precisely, the cap nipple threads...
Not in .36. My opinion. Colt 1851/61 had strong cylinder with tick wall.
@@histr100 Duelist1954 has done Winchester white box 38 special wadcutters from both Pietta and Uberti with conversion cylinders.
@@Pastor.Dragon Misunderstanding. .36 has more steel on the cylinder. There is no weak point.
Great video. It did not suck. As a result there is no need to make my own damn video.
Nice truck!
Remember folks, Jake is the guy who showed us that the "pipe Bomb" theory was bullshit too.
EBP, I figured out why you shoot these type of loads left handed. In case it goes sideways you don't want to lose your dominant hand. 😆😎
When I used to do this kind of stuff, back before the web was invented, I used to tie the gun to a fence post and pull the trigger with a string. And it worked, bc I still have all ten fingers! 🙂
Also
makes it hard to pick your nose
😄
@@bunkstagner298
You can pick your friends and you can pick your nose but you can't pick your friend's nose.
When smokeless powder was introduced, the priming compounds of the time didn't work ideally. 22 match ammo for example was not so accurate with smokeless. They found that if they mixed the ingredients of both black and smokeless into something called semi-smokeless or the trade name Lesmok, they got clean, uniform burning and only a little more powder fowling than straight smokeless.
George Frost discovered early in the conversion to smokeless for 22lr, that crimp pressure was the key. He started measuring the "pull weight" of his rimfire cartridges and came up with about 45lb pull weight being the ideal. Depending on the powder, it still is. When using a very fast powder like bullseye pull weight is not nearly as critical, but because of the nature of it's burn rate, that fast of a powder is not ideal for 22lr. A medium burn powder with a heavier crimp works best.
i wondered. if anyone would bring up lesmok, read about it years ago, there the powders are mixed.
I want to thank you all for another interesting and informative video!
I have seen people have success with 5 gr. Of clays with corn meal filler,but no crony to check velocity.
Thanks again! 👍🤠
"You woke up and decided to piss off the internet?"
"Yeah."
"I'm here for it!"
Sounds like something my Brother would say. Ahh, Brothers are the best.
You are spot on with your thinking. Ido that all the time with BP subs, use 2-3 grains of BP to ignite a stubborn charge. I am currently testing a variant of commercial Blue MZ, a sodium benzoate fuel based powder, which i call Grey MZ. Dextrin in the Blue is replaced with NC lacquer at 8-9% as binder in the Grey. I add 3% charcoal to the benzoate to improve ignition. 28 gr of Grey MZ blew up the cylinder on my Remington Sheriff, but examination showed the cylinder was a casting (Pietta). 30-35gr of Grey MZ through the ROA will give 1000+ fps with conicals and it digests these loads with ease. Thing about what we are getting into with these type of loads, low pressure in a BP revolver chamber. Load these in cartridges and ignition and velocity dramatically improve. Screw the naysayers...never know till you try
I've seen videos where they stuffed unbelievable amounts of black in a rifle and the results were a tremendous amount of recoil, enough to break the stock in the fixture it was in, but no damage to the barrel itself. I've also seen a demonstration of how dangerous it is to put smokeless powder in a black powder rifle. It took a ridiculous amount of smokeless powder to blow up that rifle, but when it did finally blow, it was catastrophic, a bomb to say the least. I'm not going to try either, but many old black powder rounds were and still are loaded with smokeless powder. To agree with you, I think it's all common sense, how much of which.
Ok, here's your new motto,
"Doing the crazy shit so you don't have to"
Keep it comkng, I love it
What I found to be cool about this was that it kept the revolver a lot cleaner than if full black powder was used. So, the smokeless did its job.
When you got the process figured out, the little bit of black behind the larger charge of smokeless and tight seating the ball, well, that was a load that was up where .38 Special and .45 ACP are operating. Not too shabby!
I love that someone actually tested this out, I can’t see a practical reason to load this way but I do see the appeal of getting 800+ fps out of 1/3rd the total powder you’d normally need to launch a .44 round ball. So maybe a good thing to know in a powder shortage
I think this lore is mainly a holdover from when people were still getting used to smokeless. People would try to load smokeless like black powder - just fill the chamber and cram the bullet on top. You'd get 20-30 grains of smokeless and that will indeed blow the thing up.
On the other hand, if you use about the same quantity of smokeless as you would in a similar-volume cartridge, it should be able to handle it. Put some filler on top to keep the powder down by the flash hole and that should get it to go off.
Now, I'd only try that in a modern repro that's in good shape. But it's definitely not impossible.
@@vicroc4 I did an experiment with pyrodex RS. I filled 06 casings to the shoulders loaded 150 gr bullets,and fired them.
Accuracy was good, primers and casings indicted a full power loading pressure appeared consistent..volocity appeared high.
It did smoke a lot.
One thing I would try is coating the unique with BP dust (5f plus powder) then load just the "coated"
I have always wondered about mixing smokeless and black powder in a C&B revolver. I throughly enjoyed this video. Thank you for making and sharing it!
Thank you
Face shields are a thing
I reload rimfire ammo with smokeless. I have found that unless you crimp them so there is an initial containment for pressure in the case it won't burn well at all. Sometimes not at all. It is the initial containment that makes the difference. A 22lr loaded with HS-6 needs a crimp pull weight of over 25lbs to begin to perform correctly...if that helps. Conversely, 22lr loaded with black does not need ANY crimp. Smokeless needs pressure to create pressure.
Love the Chevy Big Window! one of my Fav's! Brother!!!
I used 12 grains of e3 for our Diablo m/l 12g. pistol. I couldn't use less because this volume ensured I did not have any airspace.
e3 is #4 on the burn-rate chart, Unique is a bit slower at #31. Airspace and smokeless, in my experience at least, will prevent enough PRESSURE to build up for the powder to ignite, it seems the airspace absorbs some of the pressure. It's possible you could have used an inert buffer (like coffee grounds or a wad) on top of the smokeless and it would have ensured you didn't have an airgap.
None of these loads had any air gap. The 1/2 fiber cushion wad was seated against the powder
@@Everythingblackpowder I'm basing everything off my shotgun limited experience.
How do you like that E3? It seems like you use it often.
@@Everythingblackpowder It's good for really lightweight stuff, the slug can weigh only 5 grams and it will still ignite. If I used a slower powder like Longshot for something 3/4 of an ounce or less it won't ignite at all
@taofledermaus interesting!
4.5 gn of Unique sounds like a mild load in 9mm Para with a 124 gn bullet.
In .38 SPL, with 148 grain wadcutters, anything much slower than "Bullseye" will NOT burn fully. As the primer goes off and the powder starts to "ignite" the bullet moves forward, ESPECIALLY the polymer-coatedtype.
This effectively increases the combustion-chamber volume ans LOWERS pressure.
In turn, quite a lot of the initial tiddly powder charge does NOT ignite; it just leaves unburned powder all over the insides of the gun.
Years ago I had a Smith and Wesson Model 52; the semi-auto .38 SPL wadcutter target pistol. With Unique, I just got a gun full of unburned powder and bullets downrange. All that detritus simply slowed the cycling to the point it stopped functioning.
After a few "interesting" range sessions. I came to the conclusion that the best powder would be a "fast" one.
They don't get much faster than "Bullseye".
It was a revelation. Consistent velocities, reliable operation and hits on the 25yd target: WINNER.
SO......
How far down the cylinder do you ram the balls? If the powder is sloshing around in that comparatively large .44 chamber, I can understand why ignition with pure smokeless is "erratic", at best.
How "hot' re the specified "percussion caps, compared to center-fire pistil primers?
LOTS of variables in the air in this project. BUT, somebody had to ask..............And here you are!
This is pretty amazing.. AND, something I always wondered about.. Frankly, I was kind of surprised when the smokeless load failed to ignite.
That is what happens if your powder charge is to low and case capacity is to large. It will fizzle or just not burn.
WELL DONE Jake .. So far the comments are sensible & lacking the expected outrage eh.
You reminded me of 'LESMOK' that was used mostly as a .22 Rimfire load from around 1900 up to 1947 - a semi-smokeless mix of BP with 10-20% nitrocellulose - so it has all been done before by professionals. I guess the "issue" mostly is in the variables such as old weak guns and WEAK BRAINS that lack caution and not so common COMMON SENSE ?
Thank you.
My uncles use to do this ,combination for hunting I never heard of not using smokeless my family has always done it. They also have pinched the caps thats how I was taught .the thing I learn watching your videos love them .
You threw away the ring of lead? 1 billion of those and you could cast another lead roundball…
The other odd load is 1/5 real black on the bottom, Before the dex if your not running extra hot caps or have failure to ignite. The black on the bottom goes easier, its less stable.
I mostly know flintlocks and never ran dex as kid. Just something I remember reading in the one book thats like 100 bucks now. The name is in the other post.
Interesting. I sure don't intend to do this, but it's still interesting.
It's been done before with no negative results
Some time ago I had a 1873 trapdoor, and all my loading books cautioned to only use the specified .45/70 trapdoor loads only. But at the bottom of this 1940 NRA load chart it listed a duplex load of 50 gr. FFg w/ 10gr. of IMR4895. I got 60 pieces of brass w/ the rifle, and rolled up 20 rnds w/ 70gr of Goex. After the 8th or 9th shot the brass started to stick in the chamber and I used the rod bayonet to get them out. Then rolled 20 more w/ BP/4895. What a joy. Shot that 20 and the bore and in side the brass was a thin, dry, light gray deposit. I run a load similar to yours in my .44 rem and colt. So nice to run 2 or 3 wheels and not have a gummy gun.
Not just naval guns but all artillery rounds. blackpowder is used to ignite the smokeless powder. Keep in mind that the grains size of the smokeless powder is about the size of your little finger nail cubed
Hi, here in the UK we have somewhat restrictive legislation around handguns... We are allowed to have muzzle loading revolvers though, and we have developed muzzle loaders that use smokeless powder and 209 primers!
i am also into black powder revolver and rifles im intrigued
I love the banter between you and your brother!
Loved the intro :) Brilliant discussion with evidence - all the things that make your presentations infinitely watchable... learning along the way :)
I had an old Iver Johnson 16 gauge Shotgun I picked up at a swap n shop, the guy I bought it off of knew nothing about it, it was in rough shape. I went to Cabella's and bought some 16 gauge #7 target load, and put many rounds through the old gun.. I took it to a buddy of mine, who has a firearm training school (yes we have them in Canada). Anyways, he had a friend of his there on this day, who knew old & classic firearms, and told me that it was an made between 1909 & 1919 black powder rifle, and I was incredibly lucky it didn't blow up on me.
You did better than other attempts I’ve seen at trying to duplex load blackpowder/smokeless. Usually either not enough velocity or getting into explosive cylinder range. I guess the powder/caliber choice. 861 fps is great, but I think I would prefer to overload blackpowder, as far as safety is concerned.
I came in late, but caught most of the experiment. Interesting! Was thinking that perhaps a cream of wheat filler might help those deep seated loads. Thanks for the non sucky video, Jake!!
Backyard Ballistic, the professional firearms examiner and legal expert, did a similar video a few years ago but from a much more technical standpoint. Yours from more practical side.
ignition issues: use a filler (cotton fluff for example) between the projectile and the cap. It'll keep the powder against the cap for ignition inside the chamber.
That is the answer!!
That was my first reaction, however, that is not the problem here, if you load 5 gr of smokeless in a 45 Colt there is a huge amount of air space inside, exactly the same as in this experiment, I believe the problem is the lack of pressure due to the open hole in the nipple, a 45 Colt cartridge is a sealed chamber that allows pressure to build up inside, in this experiment the smokeless is in an open chamber, just like burning out in the open, it does not explode. Stay safe! Chris B.
@@453421abcdefg12345 That's possible. Crimping the cap on the nipple can help.
You were close enough to a 50/50 mix. Make yourself a batch of powder and mix it 50/50 by weight with smokeless. Load straight from the flask 25-30 grains per chamber compressed load on your 44. Would be interesting to do a full load and having the powder mixed ahead instead of loading separately
Wonder how it would act if the powders are mixed together well. Instead of in layers. I am sure its probably doing that to some extent....best quote all Week. Jake 28:02 "Smokeless performs very lame"
😂 #smokelesspowderisoverrated
I have a nitro converted Ruger Old Army. It uses shotgun primers to set off the Nitro powder. Another UK nitro converted BP revolver company (Anvil Conversions) also uses Shotgun primers.
Excellent video. Love to see a follow up with an inline rifle using modern primers. Maybe copy 50-70 loads and seat the projectile with the same depth as the cartridge. All the destruction testing I've seen with muzzle loaders used wildly inappropriate loads for even a modern rifle.
In UK replacement nipples can be bought to use shotgun primers in muzzleloading revolvers and work well with both unique max 4.5g and pyrodex powder.
Smokeless them if you got 'em ...
Good day to all.
What I would suggest is spray the barrel with DRY TEFLON®, let it dry, then test fire with a known load/speed see if that goes quicker.
Harnessing your inner Elmer Keith, huh? I can dig. ^.-.^
King’s Semi-Smokeless…
I have never posted on your site before but have been watching you guys for quite a while now. Got to say, I have learned more from your experiments and testing than any other source. Fact be known, I modeled my powder processing on all the time and hard work you guys put in to making a powder that is as good, or better than what you can buy, it works!!! Thanks so much for the time yall put in to give all of us an alternative to buying BP that is now so expensive, if you can even get it. I can tell you here in Texas, a pound of Swiss is not even available in any shop, and if you buy it online with the hazmat shipping charge it will cost you $75 or better for a pound! I have recently switched to brass media in my tumbler and man what a difference! So much cleaner than lead balls. Again, thanks so much for your willingness to give your knowledge freely!
Glad to hear it. Thank you!
I love the hype man behind the camera
I didn't expect the Unique not to ignite. My guess was that a less energetic flake powder would work better, like Red Dot or Green Dot. But not if it won't ignite with the caps. Duplex loads are likely the way to go, but I would still worry about peak pressure. Black powder has a great burn curve when compressed.
Absolutely great piece!
@Everything Black Powder Guys, thank you for all your work and sharing, I really do appreciate it.
When you were evoking the pain to layer the two different powders, I was wondering if when equal parts it wouldn't work reasonably well to just have the mixed beforehand, you know... less work and all that.
4.5 grains of Hodgson's Clays with a cornmeal to keep the powder at the flash hole works great in a cap n ball revolver.
Only concern for cleaning is the residue from the cap.
Too bad Clays isn't being made at the moment.
I have been using 4f black and triple 777 2f for years now.
One for cost and more energy. A can of 4f will give thousands of shots when you're using 4-5 grains per shot. Triple 7 77 I can buy anywhere. Smokeless needs a heck of a hot spark to light. So, to improve ignition, I started using 4f from my pan charger down the barrel of my flintlock guns .or percussion. I use a brass tube to get my 4f to the back of the barrel where I want it with no waste. Than my triple 777 on top. But you do need a gun with a patent breech plug for best performance. Any gun with just a hole in the side of the barrel is not ideal. A bess, for example .A cap and ball is just an inline ignition and ideal for duplex loads. But use your head or lose it, folks😂
Very interesting
There are many who comment by repeating things they have heard on UA-cam and read in forums and have never even fired a gun of any type. They repeat cause they think something sounds smart. Iraqveteran 8888 did an interesting video a few years ago showing what it really took to damage a black powder rifle including smokeless and barrel instructions. The result was surprising. Keep up the videos.
that compressed load of smokeless really got me on the edge of my seat! thank you for your bravery (or perhaps stupidity?) in doing these experiments for us. i was sure that a compressed load of 4.5 grains of unique like that would totally screw up the pressure curve and blow the gun up. maybe it's just that your gun's steel is tougher than what they had historically, but im pretty sure a compressed smokeless load, historically, would have blown a gun up. tbh if anything could blow up a gun it would be a compressed load of pistol powder like that. scary stuff! thanks for showing us how variable these ratios and pressures can be while remaining surprisingly safe.
I believe artillery uses the Siberian method a bit of blackpowder to set off the regular propellant.
That would explain why Estes Energetics (which owns GOEX) puts most of their production to military contracts.
Cool video, if the powder ignites when its fully mixed you will probably get a more consistent velocity assuming the recoil is not shifting the projectile. That way you could just make a batch and not have to worry about making a mistake out in the field.
Excellent video as always Jake thanks
The same concept is used in 16"-50 naval guns. A small amount of black powder (360 grams) is used in the rearmost bag to ensure ignition of the D846 propellant.
As well as in the train in 5"38 and 5"54 naval rifle powder cases.
Im shocked and distraught. Gunpowder in a gun shoots perfectly fine... My uncle's brother's buddy had a roommate in the 70s whos grandad shot a lot of BP and he said smokeless powder would never work in a gun!!!!
My "neighbors bird dog" told me his old master blew up, smelled like smokeless in the morning. Darn dog would only talk with me after his trama, I smell like eggs.
Grandad was probably correct; we all know that smokeless powder is just a fad.
I wish smokeless was just a fad black powder is way more fun😂
I used to load lite 44 mag loads for shooting matches. Dont rem the load but it was a very small amt of Winchester 231. There was a large free one space in the case i took up with dacron pillow fill. Worked good, even had a muffling effect.
So normally I look at unique as something relatively easy to ignite and volume agnostic (I run 12g of unique in a 45-70 case, which means tons of empty space). But of course that's with a far stronger primer. I think that you're right on the powder speculation: Something super fast and again relatively volume agnostic (bullseye, titegroup, etc) might be easier to ignite, and therefore produce better results.
Interesting results, most of my reloading is with more forgiving powders that don't care as much about primers and this sort of thing refocuses my attention to how primers can impact things that I normally don't pay much attention to.
In my Marlyn Guide Gun and my speghetti Sharps, I have loaded 14 grains of Unique with excellent results. If your worried about dead air space use a small tuff of dacron filler and push it down onto the powder.
@@denisdegamon8224That would be my thought, Dacron or Cream of Wheat or something. Like you would use for a reduced load in a cartridge.
That was a lot of fun just to watch. Done something along the lines of that in my Hawken rifle with win. 296 with about the same results. OUTSTANDING VIDEO.
Wow man, my dad said they did that smokeless behind black up in the mountains of Colorado, where it could would and did get down to -30. Dad also ran modern magnum shotgun shells in an old LeFever Damascus barrel black powder shotgun. My uncle f'ed the barrel up more with a car door than my dad ever did. Dad may have broken an internal part, or it could have be metal fatigue. The flat springs do look crystallized and the tips are gone. Now to piss you off. My other uncle was running coyote traps and found an old cap and ball up in the east Utah high desert when he checked to see what metal item the tie & drag chain had hit in the grass. For all you PETA people, loads of those leghold traps were stamped US government property.
I did this more than 30 years ago when I run out of black powder and there wasn't anywhere I could get some without travelling for some hours, but had a bag of blanks - 7.62×51mm NATO - from my Military service.
Although I didn't use it in a revolver, I used it in a Pedersoli Hawken cap-lock rifle.
Worked just fine and didn't do any damage to the rifle.
Theory....... The tiny hole in the nipple limits the flash to the extent that the smokeless won't ignite. The flash hole in a metallic cartridge is much larger. The ball cannot be pushed into the cylinder far enough to take up the air space and put the powder right near the priming flash.
I did read many years ago that the Brits did this with fairy dust but used a filler to hold the powder at the back of the cylinder.
To generate the full performance and MV of BP, smokeless would need over twice the peak pressure, and that might damage the pistol.
I have seen a Remington taken apart by a full charge of smokeless... the Utuber "Cap'n'ball" did a video on it. Not sure what the powder was from memory.....
The big "Kaboom" seems to be the product of a full charge of smokeless which would be an overload in a cartridge such as a 45 Colt in any case.
A thought occurs.... why not blend a bit of smokeless with the BP, use normal charges (say up to 25) so loading would be easy and run very clean....
Smart lady .
Caps also aren't sealed into a case forcing all of the primer energy down the flash hole.. the bp flash hole has to be small as it's a pressure vent to the chamber. A cartridge flash hole doesn't need to hold pressure to launch a projectile so it can be larger.
Overall, I'm impressed with your understanding of ballistics for a woman, but you never want to pre-mix smokeless with black powder. The reason being is the densities are different and you will get inconsistent loads every single time inevitably. This will range from huge swings in velocity all the way to potential kaboom. Bye bye gun and possibly fingers 😮
@@darinchick3234 Dude come on you don’t know anything about firearms …
@@panchopistola8298 try it for yourself. Mix smokeless powder and black powder in a bag and shake it up. It doesn't mix well is what I'm saying If there's a better way to do it than the guy is doing in the video that I'm all ears, but pre-mixing it together in a bag is not the way. Also you don't know what I know dummy
Mr. Everything- Applause for your experimentation! As long as the revolver did not dis-assemble itself and your finger count is the same pre- and post-experiment it seems like some duplex loads may not be as dangerous as advertised. For me though I reckon that I will stay with using black powder in my black powder revolvers (I've got cartridge revolvers for smokeless powder). Bob
You should be out there busting more of these myths. Should make a video about how easy it is to scratch the barrel with the ramrod without a bore guide
Makes me wince every time a u tube shooter throws the ramrod in and out vigorously then trys to shoot for a group! The rifleing at the muzzle gets such a battering. Plastic covered ramrods if you want your gun to last 👍
YESSssss! Bart would do it! got a tiolet to swirl the rong way?
Well if life wasn't hard it would be easy.
And Jake, like me you probably weren't brought up easy.
So Hard should be just about normal. Right?
You guys are great keep up the good work
I was really surprised you never thought to use filler. I use used coffee grounds to fill up the empty space. Then the ball seats normally and holds the powder in place - even more important with these duplex loads. Also seating the ball that deep means it has a big jump before it hits the rifling - so accuracy probably was not great.
I’m full of surprises…
If you don't seat the bullet all the way against the powder no need for fillers, an empty space is nothing alarming really but I agree I "feels" more right. Never happened to me though I always fill my cylinders because my BP is not very dense
@@yannickramouillet3742 In this case it would be to hold the black powder and smokeless in their relative positions to each other. Basically Triplex. WAY too much work to be practical for anything but fun.
There are other compositions you can use which are neither black powder OR smokeless, but this isn't he place for that.
I once used 10 grains of shotgun powder in a .45 cal Kentucky rifle. It worked just fine. It came from some old Winchester shotgun shells with the paper case. They were my grandpa's shells.
My experience with unique has always been that it likes compression. The more compressed it is, the cleaner and more efficiently it burns.
This checks out with my usage in 45 Colt. The lighter you load it, the dirtier it gets and the more unburnt particles you get everywhere.
What's interesting is that the military still technically used black powder for applications similar to in this video. It's used as a primary explosive to set off other propellants/explosives with higher activation energies. what you're basically doing is making a more powerful (corrosive) cap.
Don't you guys know that doing that will cause your kids to be born nekid?
I know a guy who does this and I have even tried it myself using the same loads he uses (2.5 gr Bullseye .380 ball 36 caliber) but I just don't want to risk it, if I intend to use smokeless loads in my BP revolver I will use a conversion cylinder and it's stronger steel. Even just 2.5 to 3 gr Bullseye and a round ball can make a lot of pressure so I personally won't be doing that anymore, still you guys are doing a great service (notice I didn't say DIS-service!) to the BP community by bringing this out into the open with a common sense discussion and demonstration. There have been several smokeless-in-BP videos using rifles that were loaded to destruction with smokeless, usually after several tries it finally ends by using an INSANE smokeless powder load for any gun and with two or more balls rammed on top of it! Then when the darn thing FINALLY gives up and bursts open we are then told "see there DON'T use smokeless in your BP firearm"! Where are these videos? I don't want to start anything by specifically picking on anyone's video but a quick search should locate a couple of them.
Hey that gun you used ain't correct because a 44 caliber Navy was never,,,,, wait, I seem to remember that someone might have already said that!
😂
Love this test I use have same gun & wondered this & on caps try using size 10 caps if your using a 11 cap now I switch to 10 caps was more reliable these was same great test I like
Get the smokeless down near the flash hole and keep it there and it will light. With that said, Popcorn is ready! :)
Same issue that cartridges have with low case capacity loads.
I love Unique. It's a very forgiving powder, and if I could only have one powder to load with, it would be Unique. As you found out though, Unique does not like light loadings. It doesn't burn completely and leaves a mess. It is definitely happier with medium to stout loads. Good Video!
Thank you
great experiment, learned alot i figured it'd either squib or blow up. glad it didnt blow up on ya man! beautiful truck too! such a vibe blackpowder shooting in the old school pickup
Thank you
@@dmre0 to use smokeless powder in black powder guns you must pretend that you're loading smokeless powder cartridges. Your gun is the cartridge casing. As with all reloading you must pay attention to what your doing,and don't break the rules. Too much, too little wrong powder , wrong seating deapth.💣🪦 Things can get out of hand very easily.small mistakes have big results.
Very interesting! Here in the UK converted muzzleloader revolvers use smokeless with shotgun primers. Try Magnum caps?
I have never needed anything stronger than 777s in cap locks. I would say try this with trail boss, but i think trail boss went out of business. ... on a side note, thats a pretty cool old truck, and i think it would be great if you would show it to us sometime. Great video, as always !
Thank you.
I second the tour of the pickup!👍
@@Everythingblackpowdermaybe you should wear a helmut or other protective gear when experimenting? Id hate to see the videos stop because of an injury.
That's an interesting point, Trail Boss is a purposely low bulk density smokeless powder. Ive put 14g of Trail Boss through an Ruger Old Army with conicals, 1300+ fps. Not worried about the frame or cylinder, my thought is blowing out the nipple threads.
@@schinderiapraemeturus6239i have not seen nor been able to find trail boss in several years now. I know its a fantastic powder tho.
(Setting aside fools that don't adjust the quantity when switching powders.) Most smokeless actually has a smoother pressure curve shape that is less hard on the gun for a given potential energy. Black tends to spike the pressure really hard at the start then taper off.
BRING ON THE CHAOS!
The guy that taught me how to blackpowder shoot used to use 2400 in his .54 as a deer load....he always said 2400 had the same pressure curve as black powder when loaded to the same velocity with the same bullet.....dunno how much truth there was to that theory but considering i have that rifle now it didn't do it any harm
Ive used true blue powder for this. It works but i didnt do a torture test. I think if the pistols can handle the conversion cylinders the only thing i see being an issue is the piette or uberti cylinders are made of questionable chinese metal.
Good point
As a kinda fudd, what i was always told about this was people were loading smokeless (by volume), with the same amount as they would black. For instance, 20gr of unique. And then blowing up their guns. My grandfather told me about duplex loads, for black powser cartridge guns. It could also possibly have started with semi smokless powder, the lore that is.
Duelest 1954 (Mike ) did an episode on goex being the mil spec for artillery bag charge ignition powder . I think all big guns still work that way .
Considering Estes Energetics (which owns GOEX) has used "military contracts" as the excuse for why only small amounts of powder are coming to retailers, I suspect they do.
I have a original 1851 Colt Navy with one cylinder that was bulged and cracked. This is a family heirloom that my ancestor carried in the US Civil War. A long time ago one of my uncles did the dirty deed with smokeless powder. When I was younger my dad showed me the gun and explained how it was damaged. I wish I knew what powder and how much was used. Dad then carefully heated the bulge and with a press slowly pushed the cylinder bulge back in. Shape was restored also the engraved scene on the cylinder was saved. We never fired the gun.
Well ACTUALLY Colt DID experiment with a 44 1851 and at least one prototype was indeed made. I have an extensive collection of Italian clones including a couple of "fantasy" guns. Great vid Jake. You are a better man then I :)
Oh yes, I’m aware. I believe Colt made some 20 odd prototypes in 40 and 44 cal but if I mentioned that it would have really ruffled some feathers.
Thank you for thinking outside the box, and taking reasonable risks to help us all know more about our guns and what they can do. I agree that the deviation in fps is probably from the ball moving forward a smidge and loosing a little compression. Yes they do still use a little bp in naval gun charges.
It makes sense when you think about it, if you keep the loads *reasonable* and don't load 30 grains by volume of smokeless.. it should be fine... The issue when you have "the lowest common denominator" loading it up, thinking they're using BP and throwing in a huge load like 30grains of smokeless in, that would make even some center fire rifles cry.
Savage made an inline muzzleloader that was "rated" for smokeless years back, and you could load either BP or smokeless as you saw fit, with recommended loads.
I think a load in 45 colt is like 6-8 grains of unique? 45 colt has a pressure of something like ~14k CUP, and BP can be anywhere between 12 and 20, sometimes more in larger guns. I think if you stick to "cowboy loads" and use just a tad bit of common sense, it wouldn't kill you.
Might have to try a tad larger load, but slap some cotton or other wadding in there to keep the powder right up against the hole and maybe try a larger heavier bullet to give it time to build more pressure?
30 grs of any smokeless will disintegrate a Colt 45 chambered gun of any sort.
Out in nature, sitting on the tailgate of a classic pickup, experimenting with a cap and ball revolver. Sounds like an awesome day.
Percussion caps don't seal well, losing pressure before smokeless ignites. Smokeless needs pressure.
Didn't realize I was going to find a channel this bad ass today. Subscribed.
Welcome aboard
Inquiring minds want to know! Thanks for doing this video.
You bet
Just need a hotter cap. My muzzle loading savage ml10 is made to shoot smokeless powder and works fine but it uses a shotgun primer and I belive it came with the set up to use a hot traditional cap as well. So really I bet 2 grains of black powder should set it off on the caps your using till you can get the hotter caps.
With the smokeless, it becomes a bunny gun. Perfect for hunting rabbits.
He woke up today and chose violence. LMAO
😂