So much for powder all burns within an inch or so of the case mouth too.
Larry I don`t know this to be true, but I`ve been told by what I feel are reliable people the deal is "all the powder that is going to burn, burns within the 1st inch or so of the barrel". That does not mean "all" the powder is burnt, just that all the powder that can burn with the oxygen that the chemical process produces does. The gas that is produced is still full of extremely hot unburnt flammables that re-ignite upon contact with the air and a fresh oxygen supply showing as "muzzle flash".
Again, I have no proof, this is just what I`ve been led to believe occurs.
In black powder this is true but not smokeless powder if you fire a muzzle loader the recoil is hard and sharp the recoil from say my 1903 is a pushback the powder burns for a long time in comparison to the black powder which explodes not so much burns
In black powder this is true but not smokeless powder if you fire a muzzle loader the recoil is hard and sharp the recoil from say my 1903 is a pushback the powder burns for a long time in comparison to the black powder which explodes not so much burns