Manual
13
Understanding Black Powder
or an approved Black Powder Substitute,
Such As Pyrodex
™
Make no mistake about it, Black Powder or an approved Black Powder
substitute, such as Pyrodex
®
, are the only propellant powders that are safe to
use in a muzzleloading firearm. Oh, you will hear, or possibly read, advice to the con-
trary but don’t follow it for you will never hear such advice from a competent source.
The reason for using a low yield powder such as Black Powder or an approved Black
Powder substitute, such as Pyrodex is quite basic and it is related to firearm design. When
used as a propellant, Black Powder or an approved Black Powder substitute, such as
Pyrodex generates a relatively low breech pressure. Muzzleloading firearms, even those
with modern steel barrels, are not designed to withstand the high pressures produced by
a Smokeless Powder charge. Think about it for a minute and you will understand why. The
ignition hole in a muzzleloading firearm is a direct port into the combustion chamber.
This port is sealed only by the thin foil of a cap and weight of the hammer in the cap lock
model. In the flint lock design this port is not sealed at all. The high pressure of a
Smokeless Powder charge would destroy this ignition system and the gun itself.
To avoid any misunderstanding on the part of the reader let us explain further why
Smokeless Powder cannot be used in a muzzleloader in any quantity. People who become
interested in muzzleloading tend to research and to seek out some of the early journals
which describe loading implements, components and powders of yesterday. Reading
these old books can be pleasurable. Never assume, however, that obsolete
printed material has a safe application in today’s world.
In the early days of the breech loader there were powders manufactured which were
called “Bulk Smokeless”. These powders were measured by the volume and used inter-
changeably with Black Powder in early cartridge firearms. Even in their time these pow-
ders were never used in muzzleloading firearms.
Early “Bulk Smokeless” powders are not available today and, even if they were, their
erratic performance (extreme variations in pressure) would not meet current industry
standards. By modern standards, such early bulk powders were unsafe, even in the days
of their use. The same type of misinformation exists concerning “duplex loads” or the
mixing of Smokeless Powder with quantities of Black Powder. This practice was popular
in the days of the early breech loaders. It was dangerous then and it is even more dan-
gerous now for modern Smokeless Powders are far more complex in their composition.
All presently available Smokeless Powders are designed for use with me-
tallic cartridges and shotshells in strong modern breech loading firearms.