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Anyone have formula for YELLOW LANCE ?


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#16 Green_as_my_powder

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Posted 02 March 2009 - 09:09 PM

O.K. I've been looking. I found the Kosanke formula for green in an old post on this forum, but not the others. Could you supply the rest? Or at least a hint where to look next? To be honest, I'd rather be building stuff than net searches...

Any help appreciated.
And the priest shall take from the cereal offering its memorial portion and burn this on the altar, an offering by fire, a pleasing odor to the LORD.
(Lev 2:9)

--seems to me that if God likes the odor of burnt cereal, He's just gotta love gunpowder...

#17 spanner

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Posted 03 March 2009 - 04:51 AM

I don't remember where I found them- but didn't Skylighter buy the rights to some of their comps? Looking there might help.

I have a HyperSnap of several pages in table form. Unfortunately, the forum doesn't allow uploading images straight from a computer- it requires a URL.

Rewriting it isn't likely, there's 21 diff. chems, 12 star comps, 2 primes and notes.

#18 Creepin_pyro

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Posted 03 March 2009 - 08:57 AM

http://books.google....mixing#PPA23,M1

:rolleyes:

#19 Green_as_my_powder

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Posted 03 March 2009 - 02:37 PM

Thanks for the link! I had found the book there, but got tired of paging through and never made it to the formula.

It's interesting, because the formula I did find for Green (credited to Kosanke) was different. It included MgAl and atomized Al.

Next question: The Kosanke blue formula calls for paris green, which I don't have, can't find, and heard it was fairly toxic. Any other blue formula that I could mix with the other Kosanke formulas? Any source for paris green (preferably in the US)?

Thanks again (and again) for all the help!
And the priest shall take from the cereal offering its memorial portion and burn this on the altar, an offering by fire, a pleasing odor to the LORD.
(Lev 2:9)

--seems to me that if God likes the odor of burnt cereal, He's just gotta love gunpowder...

#20 Green_as_my_powder

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Posted 03 March 2009 - 02:40 PM

I don't remember where I found them- but didn't Skylighter buy the rights to some of their comps? Looking there might help.

I have a HyperSnap of several pages in table form. Unfortunately, the forum doesn't allow uploading images straight from a computer- it requires a URL.

Rewriting it isn't likely, there's 21 diff. chems, 12 star comps, 2 primes and notes.



I've never used hyperSnap, but you could probably print to a Acrobat PDF file, or do screen captures and save as JPG files. Anything is better than typing it out!
And the priest shall take from the cereal offering its memorial portion and burn this on the altar, an offering by fire, a pleasing odor to the LORD.
(Lev 2:9)

--seems to me that if God likes the odor of burnt cereal, He's just gotta love gunpowder...

#21 spanner

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Posted 03 March 2009 - 11:02 PM

I had found the book there, but got tired of paging through and never made it to the formula.

It probably took longer to ask for the spoon-fed answers than to have looked it up yourself, if you found that book to review (it is less than 30 pages...). I think I alluded to this earlier- IMO, you're just not trying hard enough! :)

It's interesting, because the formula I did find for Green (credited to Kosanke) was different. It included MgAl and atomized Al.

The formula you found was most likely the star formula- it does contain 4% magnalium and 9% atomized Al. The formulas from Creepin_pyro's link (thanks for that, C_p!) are for lances.

Edited by spanner, 03 March 2009 - 11:30 PM.


#22 Green_as_my_powder

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Posted 04 March 2009 - 02:37 AM

[quote name='spanner' date='Mar 3 2009, 06:02 PM' post='54351']
It probably took longer to ask for the spoon-fed answers than to have looked it up yourself, if you found that book to review (it is less than 30 pages...). I think I alluded to this earlier- IMO, you're just not trying hard enough! :)

You are probably right. I should have looked more. In my own lame defense, I live in the middle of nowhere (good for fireworks, bad for internet) and all I have is dial-up internet which never connects at full speed because the phone lines are so bad. The book site took quite a while to load each page...whine...whine...whine.
And the priest shall take from the cereal offering its memorial portion and burn this on the altar, an offering by fire, a pleasing odor to the LORD.
(Lev 2:9)

--seems to me that if God likes the odor of burnt cereal, He's just gotta love gunpowder...

#23 Green_as_my_powder

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Posted 04 March 2009 - 02:51 AM

I'm sorry to repeat myself, but I'm still stuck...

The Kosanke blue formula calls for paris green, which I don't have, can't find, and heard it was fairly toxic. Any other blue formula that I could mix with the other Kosanke formulas? Any source for paris green (preferably in the US)?

What's worse, (or really neat...depending on your viewpoint) is that my eldest daughter is considering doing a science fair project on combining different colors of light, and comparing the results to combining different colors of paint (don't laugh...she is only 10 y.o.). So I'm hoping to find a solution to the paris green problem. I'll probably have to use the Veline formulas (which I've heard produce somewhat pale colors) if a substitue can't be found.

Thanks again (and again) for all the help!
And the priest shall take from the cereal offering its memorial portion and burn this on the altar, an offering by fire, a pleasing odor to the LORD.
(Lev 2:9)

--seems to me that if God likes the odor of burnt cereal, He's just gotta love gunpowder...

#24 Mumbles

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Posted 04 March 2009 - 04:41 AM

You didn't read any of the words in that book, did you?

You're going to have a hell of a time finding paris green. You could probably substitute another copper salt, such as Copper oxychloride for it though.

There are some simple, compatable formulas in Hardt on page 118.

#25 spanner

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Posted 04 March 2009 - 01:51 PM

Any source for paris green (preferably in the US)?

This is the ONLY supplier I've found recently- and he's currently out. Check the site occasionally, he's looking to restock.

I should have bought more when I could have, it's going pretty fast since I realized how nice the blues are that it makes.

#26 Green_as_my_powder

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Posted 18 March 2009 - 02:03 AM

Thanks for the link, but I didn't see any paris green listed. Perhaps they have stopped selling it as well...
And the priest shall take from the cereal offering its memorial portion and burn this on the altar, an offering by fire, a pleasing odor to the LORD.
(Lev 2:9)

--seems to me that if God likes the odor of burnt cereal, He's just gotta love gunpowder...

#27 Potassium chlorate

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Posted 24 March 2010 - 06:06 PM

I would also be very interested for a source of Paris Green but in Europe. The colour is most superior. Posted Image

On topic: cryolite is very good for yellow, and it's non-hygroscopic. Ceramic suppliers have it, and the quality is quite alright for lances and Bengals. Posted Image

Edited by Pyroswede, 24 March 2010 - 06:08 PM.

"This salt, formerly called hyperoxymuriate of potassa, is
used for sundry preparations, and especially for experimental
fire-works."

Dr. James Cutbush

#28 Mumbles

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Posted 24 March 2010 - 06:26 PM

Part of me wonders if the Paris Green color is really that much better, or if it is just part of the "back in my day, things were better" syndrome. Looking back on my shells, I am sure my memories are doctored to make them seem better than they really were. Regardless, I still plan to make some PG, and do a side by side test. I know another person who has done this, who has quite a bit of experience. Oddly enough, the perchlorate compositions came out the best in his tests. I have some HCB too, which I hear the secret ingredient to the great PG blues of the past, so we shall see. HCB comps were one thing he did not test.

#29 digger

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Posted 25 March 2010 - 10:42 PM

Part of me wonders if the Paris Green color is really that much better, or if it is just part of the "back in my day, things were better" syndrome.


My thoughts exactly on this item
Phew that was close.

#30 Potassium chlorate

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Posted 26 March 2010 - 08:20 AM

I have only seen it on Youtube (I might have seen it IRL too, of course, but not to my knowledge), and it looks much deeper than any other blue. And it's pretty dark blue, not blueish-white, blueish-violet or blueish-indigo.

Edited by Pyroswede, 26 March 2010 - 08:21 AM.

"This salt, formerly called hyperoxymuriate of potassa, is
used for sundry preparations, and especially for experimental
fire-works."

Dr. James Cutbush




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