Charcoal (and making black powder)
#31
Posted 20 December 2003 - 08:21 PM
Up until the first world war artillery grenades filled with PB as explosive filler were shot (esp. shrapnel grenades). The grendades didn't blow up in the barrel. We guys shoot star shells filled with PB and sometimes even with flash comp. out of mortars. None of the shells explodes because of the heavy kick it gets when shot out.
And now you are seriously thinking PB may explode from dry milling. Ever tried to explode PB by a hammer blow. I mean lay a gramm or so of PB on an anvil and hit it as hard as you can with a sledgehammer. I wasn't able to get it explode this way even with commercially manufactured PB (WANO/Dynamit Nobel PB).
The charcoal/KNO3 mix will also explode/deflagrate when ignited even if you leave the sulfur out.
#32
Posted 20 December 2003 - 08:59 PM
Tris
#33
Posted 20 December 2003 - 11:08 PM
The point being made about dry milling has to do with static I would expect. Plenty of good pyros have lost their lives due to this.
Six % where I live will darn near turn the contents of a ball mill into a slurry.
#34
Posted 21 December 2003 - 02:01 PM
You will always get a mess when trying to mill the comp. wet.
#35
Posted 21 December 2003 - 02:15 PM
#36
Posted 21 December 2003 - 02:22 PM
#37
Posted 21 December 2003 - 05:21 PM
#38
Posted 23 December 2003 - 08:05 AM
#39
Posted 24 December 2003 - 02:50 AM
#40
Posted 27 December 2003 - 09:09 PM
i had you problem once, the main reason i was using bbq charcoal which is very bad because it is stuffed up with clay and other non wanted materials.
and i did not have a ball mill, i still dont i use a coffee grinder cost me ?21.00
works perfect and if there are any lumps after being grinded down for a few minutes i attack it with a pestil and mortar.
#41
Posted 07 January 2004 - 07:24 AM
anyway dose any one know if you have to debark grape vine, or if the vine even has bark that needs to come off before its cooked?
Marcus
#42
Posted 07 January 2004 - 11:30 AM
The important things are to make small rods of wood to cut down the " turn in to coal transfering" time. No bark and no branches lowers the contents of ash. And do not open the container containing fresh hot coal. Oxygen from the air will spoil some of the coal. Open the container when it is cool. One time I opened the container and handed the coal inside a plastic bag. The coal reacted whith the air and melted the bag . The coal sounded like burning/glowing coal.
http://www.freewebs....biki/Index.html
#43
Posted 07 January 2004 - 06:40 PM
yesterday was my first attempt at cooking charcoal and I was suprised with my succes. I made some pine.
Can any one help clear this up, in a number of shimizus chysanthemum (charcoal fire dust) comps it CALLS for pine then goes on to say that if willow is used, long lasting sparks will result but willow is suposed to burn quick in bp:how can it be both?
#44
Posted 07 January 2004 - 07:36 PM
Can any one help clear this up, in a number of shimizus chysanthemum (charcoal fire dust) comps it CALLS for pine then goes on to say that if willow is used, long lasting sparks will result but willow is suposed to burn quick in bp:how can it be both?
I've often wondered that too. Tiger tail is my regulation star, and I've tried several types of wood in it. Willow seems to work OK, and barbeque charcoal works well (I think that this is pine, as the maker would probably brag if it was hardwood, which they don't) but in my experience the best and brightest charcoal for sparks has been apple wood. I originally made this for BP, as a post in the rec.pyrotechnics archive by one of the regulars (can't remember who) listed it as one of the fastest woods. In the end I never tried it in BP as it seemed a waste of wonderful star material, and my willow BP is more than fast enough (20g lifts a 70mm shell (OK, not quite 3") to a good height - ha,ha!)
If you don't have willow, another very fast BP wood I've been meaning to try is dogwood, and maple is said to be faster than grapevine by some people. I think Geox uses maple (could be wrong though). However, in my experience whilst willow is the best wood I've tried, most wood, even barbeque charcoal, will make usable BP, you might just need a bit more of it and a longer tube (for lauching things). Alternatively, BP can always be speeded up a little by corning it into smaller grains.
#45
Posted 07 January 2004 - 11:41 PM
That?s? simply because the composition, even when well mixed, have lots of charcoal. This means that some charcoal stay ?unbounded? to the other chemicals, and burns like ? well, wood in open air (not accurate, but I hope it gives general idea).Can any one help clear this up, in a number of shimizus chysanthemum (charcoal fire dust) comps it CALLS for pine then goes on to say that if willow is used, long lasting sparks will result but willow is suposed to burn quick in bp:how can it be both?
Since willow and pine, as wood, have different burning characteristics, the effect is slightly different. Think about the charcoal not as part of a composition, but as an individual.
If you hope to get the same effect Shimizu see, forget it. Lancaster already mentioned that he never saw a European pine that burn like the one growing in Japan. He called the Japanese pine ?superior? in sparks effects.
As for wood ? read many posts on the subject. There is no such thing as ?better?. It really depends what you have near you and what the effect you want to get. Commercial manufacturers of BP use hardwood (so not willow), and they make staff that burns faster then the staff most of us make. Lots have to do with the process and the machinery.
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