Copper Benzoate
#1
Posted 19 September 2008 - 05:09 PM
#2
Posted 20 September 2008 - 06:46 AM
I have a bag of copper benz that I'd like to use up, but I don't have any ammonium perchlorate. Does anyone have any formulas for stars,coloured fire etc... that I could use this on?
I am not going to vouch for this but here are some comps.
From the "Best of AFN II" everything by weight.
New Blue
Ammonium perchlorate 82%
Copper Benzoate 18%
Bind with 1% nitrocellulose and make pumped or cut firework stars
New Electric Purple
Ammonium Perchlorate 68%
Copper Benzoate 8%
Strontium Carbonate 12%
Magnalium, 200-400 mesh 5%
Hexamine 7%
Dextrin +4%
#3
Posted 20 September 2008 - 09:24 AM
Blue Metallic Fueled Star:
Name: Slow Metallic Blue
Source: Bert
Potassium Perchlorate 100
Polyvinyl Chloride (PVC). 25
Copper Benzoate 14
Dextrin 10
Red Gum 7
Stearic Acid (Stearine) 5
Tare: Total: 161
NOTES:
Instead of using Copper Benzoate use Copper powder!!!
#4
Posted 21 September 2008 - 05:06 AM
To inspire, some ideas could be strontium nitrate / copper benzoate / chlorine donor for purple or barium nitrate for aqua or turquoise.
Even potassium nitrate can make a good blue base with copper compounds if there is enough of a chlorine donor! (to cool the flame as well).
Potassium perchlorate and chlorate should both burn very well with copper benzoate.
-MDH
#5
Posted 21 September 2008 - 11:14 AM
In regard to the Compositions that you posted, it is obvious that you got them from the Skylighter archive where they are referred to as "New Blue" ect. While I cannot find the creator of the Ammonium perchlorate/Copper benzoate blue, the Skylighter article states that they were sourced from AFN II. The purple was created by David Blesser.
It is indeed a very nice purple too. Here is a purple of my own, and while it cant quite match AP purple, it is uses KP and Cu benzoate.
Potassium perchlorate 45
Strontium nitrate 19
Copper benzoate 17
Parlon 15
Magnalium 4
#6
Posted 21 September 2008 - 01:42 PM
Just try experimenting in tiny quantities.
To inspire, some ideas could be strontium nitrate / copper benzoate / chlorine donor for purple or barium nitrate for aqua or turquoise.
Even potassium nitrate can make a good blue base with copper compounds if there is enough of a chlorine donor! (to cool the flame as well).
Potassium perchlorate and chlorate should both burn very well with copper benzoate.
-MDH
You know of any blue comps using only pot. nitrate as the oxidiser
#7
Posted 22 September 2008 - 07:41 PM
I am not going to vouch for this but here are some comps.
From the "Best of AFN II" everything by weight.
New Blue
Ammonium perchlorate 82%
Copper Benzoate 18%
Bind with 1% nitrocellulose and make pumped or cut firework stars
New Electric Purple
Ammonium Perchlorate 68%
Copper Benzoate 8%
Strontium Carbonate 12%
Magnalium, 200-400 mesh 5%
Hexamine 7%
Dextrin +4%
Please try and read my whole post next time...IF I had ammonium perc I wouldn't be asking for formulas that don't contain it.
#8
Posted 22 September 2008 - 10:31 PM
#9
Posted 23 September 2008 - 12:52 PM
#10
Posted 23 September 2008 - 01:14 PM
Edited by demoman, 23 September 2008 - 01:16 PM.
#11
Posted 23 September 2008 - 01:33 PM
I would like to find formulas for any colour using only Pot. Nitrate as the oxidiser. Anyone want to share.
No such formulas exist...
#12
Posted 23 September 2008 - 01:48 PM
I would like to find formulas for any colour using only Pot. Nitrate as the oxidiser. Anyone want to share.
From my experience the flame it to hot, any signs of blue get washed out and end up looking more white then blue. it's easy to slow down the reaction rate of a nitrate formulas, but it's next to impossible to cool down the flame.
#13
Posted 23 September 2008 - 06:01 PM
I would like to find formulas for any colour using only Pot. Nitrate as the oxidiser. Anyone want to share.
You might be able to make a really crappy red or maybe a really crappy green, but I doubt it. To make any decent colours you'll need other (better) oxidzers.
#14
Posted 23 September 2008 - 08:52 PM
You might be able to make a really crappy red or maybe a really crappy green, but I doubt it. To make any decent colours you'll need other (better) oxidzers.
that's not accurate... you can make some good green, red, purple
#15
Posted 23 September 2008 - 11:04 PM
Although I agree that whatever blue is created with nitrate, it'd be rather washed out, so the goal right now would just be to achieve a pale or "Sky" blue.
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