Black powder

2ndDEboy

Sergeant
Joined
Jun 23, 2023
Was able to get some 1.5 fg for decent deal can thus be used to blanks or will it not burn up as quick as 2fg it is as course same size as ffg maybe a very very tiny tiny microscopic millimeter smaller but to the naked eye looks the same size
 
Just make sure what you have.
Someone went to his shop and pulled down an old can and asked: "Do you want this Black Powder?"

I looked at the dusty label: "BALL POWDER".
 
1.5 F is a new one on me, are you meaning grain size which about 1.5 mm would be 1F? 1F is usually meant for artillery, you want 2 or 3 F for a rifle/musket, 3 or 4 F for pistols/revolvers. From my personal experience firing blank rounds 3 F performs the best. You're not going to get 1F to burn good, especially fring blanks.
 
I would think it would be safe to use for that. Just don't forget what you have once you remove it from the container.
I too think 1.5f should work out just fine. I'm not into reenacting but don't they have regulations and rules about what you can and cannot use? I doubt they got a rule stating what granulation of powder you can use but just don't tell them. Let them think it's 2f. Nobody can be that "picky".
 
I too think 1.5f should work out just fine. I'm not into reenacting but don't they have regulations and rules about what you can and cannot use? I doubt they got a rule stating what granulation of powder you can use but just don't tell them. Let them think it's 2f. Nobody can be that "picky".
There's no regulation usually for grain size but usually most events say a 60 grain charge but I've hardly ever seen that actually checked. There is a difference though in how they perform. From my experience and most agree firing blank rounds reenacting 3F is the most consistent and will burn a lot cleaner. It will all make noise, fire, and smoke but sometimes not every time you pull the trigger if your not using the right thing.
 
There's no regulation usually for grain size but usually most events say a 60 grain charge but I've hardly ever seen that actually checked. There is a difference though in how they perform. From my experience and most agree firing blank rounds reenacting 3F is the most consistent and will burn a lot cleaner. It will all make noise, fire, and smoke but sometimes not every time you pull the trigger if your not using the right thing.
Are paper cartridges minus the ball used in reenacting?
 
I´ve fired 2f from my musket. It makes a good main charge. I´d like something a little finer for the priming charge for a flintlock, though.
 
I too think 1.5f should work out just fine. I'm not into reenacting but don't they have regulations and rules about what you can and cannot use? I doubt they got a rule stating what granulation of powder you can use but just don't tell them. Let them think it's 2f. Nobody can be that "picky".
Some powder doesn't burn all the way and to be better safe wouldn't want to rain down grains of powder on anyone!
 
If you are shooting for noise just get the cheapest powder you can find.
Not necessary to fire expensive stuff. Use a scale build it to what you want. IMO

That may work for rifles, but it won't work for artillery. I remember when they used to give us elephant brand powder as a powder bounty for artillery - we would refuse to take it. it did not burn well in cannons, it would burn too slow. sounded like an elephant fart instead of a cannon going off. We have found that the Schuetzen 1FG works good for artillery.
 

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