Re: Minimizing powder variation - lot to lot
<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: The Mechanic</div><div class="ubbcode-body">
I have always thought about getting a small bottle of dry nitrogen and giving it a little soft blast into the bottle before sealing it back up. Just never followed through with it. </div></div>
I was using QuickLoad and OBT to work up a new load from an 11-month old bottle of RL-19 and the chrono numbers just weren't making sense. I asked one of my reloading mentors about it and he suggested my powder had gained a substantial amount of water weight, which could account for my bullets being so slow. Sounded like bullshit to me but just for shits and giggles, I put a packet of silica gel desiccant in the bottle and left it.
The next day, I loaded up a handful of rounds and chronographed them. The same charge weight was 70 fps faster. So I let it dry out for another day. Day two, I loaded up another handful of rounds and chronographed them. They were 96 fps faster (despite the weather turning 15°F cooler) and I got the first hint of a stiff bolt lift. The next day, I was afraid I was going to overpressure the rifle so I reduced the charge weight but ran the chrono numbers through QuickLoad to determine the powder's new "burn rate factor."
It took five days altogether before the increase in velocity leveled out. I started out getting 3022 fps from 44.2 grains. When it finished, 41.4 grains was getting me 2992 fps. Somewhere along the way, my RL-19 had absorbed a bit more than 6% of its weight in humidity.
So now I put a packet of silica gel desiccant in every bottle of powder at least a week before I first use it. Then I chrono a few test rounds to account for differences in lots. I figure if I reduce the water weight to nil from day one and keep it there, that's the best consistency I can hope for.
The silica gel packets are cheap. Most new electronic goodies come with a decent sized packet in the packing that can be put to use. And they're re-usable/re-chargeable. Two hours in a 250° oven and they're good as new. The only thing is the free bags are sealed with glue so heating in the oven might make the seams come apart. Just give 'em to Panty Six and have her sew a seam on the three sealed sides with cotton thread and you're in bidness.