H
HBC
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Hygroscopic
Bob,
I recently read a shooter describing smokeless powder as highly hygroscopic. I believe cellulose is highly hygroscopic but smokeless powder is not cellulose, it is cellulose nitrate. I also recently looked for the hygroscopic nature of various materials but could find nothing. Please let me know if you know of such information.
I think smokeless powder is hygroscopic to some degree but not highly hygroscopic. Here is a little test: place a granule of extruded smokeless powder in the jaws of a fingernail clipper and cut the granule in half. Use your judgment and experience, based on cutting the granule, what material is that granule of smokeless powder most like?
If you are concerned with humidity absorption into your smokeless powder, test your powder to see whether it gains weight or losses weight and to what degree. It will likely vary from powder to powder and from lot to lot and will also vary with the atmospheric dew point.
Yesterday I loaded 34 rounds for a 600 yard match to be held Saturday at the James Howard Prince Memorial Gun Range, located between Pioneer and Goodwill, Louisiana. My load is my 6mmx64 with RWS brass, Wolf primers, 55 grains Retumbo with a 115 grain Berger VLD Match, 0.011 ITL at a muzzle velocity of 3269 f/s out of a 33" long Krieger, 0.237" bore and 7" twist. I left one charge out and over a period of 20.92 hours it gained 0.06 grains weight. Based on the results of 1.36% water absorption into 54 grains H1000, I estimate a velocity loss of about 0.8 f/s for the 55 grain load of Retumbo exposed for 1 hour to moisture absorption.
The description of 80% humidity is not adequate, you must also state the temperature. Dew point is a better method of describing humidity, R.H. is a poor method. An R.H. of 30% at 80 F is more humid than a R.H. of 100% at 40 F. Go to Wikipedia and read about R.H., especially look at the chart near the bottom of the page that plots the humidity in terms of water vapor per kg of air versus temperature for 50% and 100% R.H.
Henry
Bob,
I recently read a shooter describing smokeless powder as highly hygroscopic. I believe cellulose is highly hygroscopic but smokeless powder is not cellulose, it is cellulose nitrate. I also recently looked for the hygroscopic nature of various materials but could find nothing. Please let me know if you know of such information.
I think smokeless powder is hygroscopic to some degree but not highly hygroscopic. Here is a little test: place a granule of extruded smokeless powder in the jaws of a fingernail clipper and cut the granule in half. Use your judgment and experience, based on cutting the granule, what material is that granule of smokeless powder most like?
If you are concerned with humidity absorption into your smokeless powder, test your powder to see whether it gains weight or losses weight and to what degree. It will likely vary from powder to powder and from lot to lot and will also vary with the atmospheric dew point.
Yesterday I loaded 34 rounds for a 600 yard match to be held Saturday at the James Howard Prince Memorial Gun Range, located between Pioneer and Goodwill, Louisiana. My load is my 6mmx64 with RWS brass, Wolf primers, 55 grains Retumbo with a 115 grain Berger VLD Match, 0.011 ITL at a muzzle velocity of 3269 f/s out of a 33" long Krieger, 0.237" bore and 7" twist. I left one charge out and over a period of 20.92 hours it gained 0.06 grains weight. Based on the results of 1.36% water absorption into 54 grains H1000, I estimate a velocity loss of about 0.8 f/s for the 55 grain load of Retumbo exposed for 1 hour to moisture absorption.
The description of 80% humidity is not adequate, you must also state the temperature. Dew point is a better method of describing humidity, R.H. is a poor method. An R.H. of 30% at 80 F is more humid than a R.H. of 100% at 40 F. Go to Wikipedia and read about R.H., especially look at the chart near the bottom of the page that plots the humidity in terms of water vapor per kg of air versus temperature for 50% and 100% R.H.
Henry
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