LOL have a look on the for sale page of my website its been there ages
LOL, git. I checked your site the other day aswel, missed it
Posted 07 June 2008 - 05:19 PM
LOL have a look on the for sale page of my website its been there ages
Posted 15 December 2010 - 10:32 PM
7% Si in meal is usually quite enough. It easily sets fire to stars, trees, jeans, boots...
Been there, done that, still have the scorch marks
Posted 17 December 2010 - 02:29 AM
Edited by seymour, 17 December 2010 - 02:34 AM.
Posted 17 December 2010 - 02:28 PM
why don't you use a chlorate/charcoal prime, like H3, or perhaps with a small quantity of resin.
Posted 17 December 2010 - 02:33 PM
You can use Si, though usually Chlorate stars are much more ignitable than perchlorate ones, so the Silicon is probably quite unnecessary.
I would be less comfortable using Sulfurless BP + MgAl. You've probably heard of the nitrate/Aluminium reaction. Magnalium, being 50% Aluminium counts, and because it's alloyed with Magnesium, it's more reactive.
When Nitrates react with Aluminium, ammonia is produced, as I'm sure many of us are aware from experience!
Ammonia is incompatible with chlorates in quite an extreme way, since Ammonium chlorate can be produced.
So not out of fear of the nitrate/Aluminium 'incompatibility' which everyone mixes, because it can be made stable enough to work, but out of fear of the resulting Ammonium/chlorates incompatibility I advice everyone to avoid the mixture of nitrates, chlorates and Al or MgAl.
Finally, why don't you use a chlorate/charcoal prime, like H3, or perhaps with a small quantity of resin. I am aware that many people fear the contact between the chlorate star and the BP in fireworks, but this is not as dangerous as many people believe, plus it is very safe when using the stars in shells where H3 is used as the burst, the logical option to me.
Posted 18 December 2010 - 04:05 AM
Posted 18 December 2010 - 04:22 PM
Either method of priming will work. My personal preference is to use a slurry, and then dust it with powder to "dry it up".
If they blow blind from a shell then something is wrong. Perhaps the Strontium carbonate content, if large enough, is inhibiting the burning significantly enough to inhibit ignition, or reduce the speed at which the flame is extinguished to below the speed it's thrown from the shell at. Adding a metal to the prime seems quite unnecessary considering that there is no metal in the star composition. Potassium chlorate usually burns hotter than Potassium nitrate, so hopefully H3, or similar, will be more successful than Sulfurless BP.
Potentially they are soft, or the prime has not bonded well enough, and the burst either smashes the stars, or smashes the prime off them. Take a star, and using your fingers try to crush it. If you can, even if it hurts to do so, then I would consider this to be a likely cause of your problem.
Posted 21 December 2010 - 12:42 AM
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