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2-piper #66101 11/12/07 10:29 PM
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If you get out one of the old WW reloading books you will note they don't have any low pressure loads for hunting. They favor 10,000 psi or more. I am suprised about the 540 comments, we use it for ducks and it was in the teens on many of the mornings, we did use Remington wads?
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Some of us have long standing habit of ONLY using cold-weather hunting loads that have at least 9.000 psi at nominal 75F temperatures. We acquired that habit after getting bloopers in cold weather - near freezing or below - with loads of slower burning powders, loads that were just fine at 50F and above.

Lower pressure - lower velocity loads with Blue Dot taught me that lesson one cold day in the marsh. Two more grains of that slow powder and all was well, down to around freezing, at least. My all-time favorate powder for lower pressure, lower velocity loads, IMR SR7625, needs to be loaded to nominal 9K+ psi at 75 F to give reliable perfomance when the ice forms. Green Dot, by contrast, does not produce bloopers so readily when going from 75F to freezing. I use a lot of Green Dot in recent years.

Niklas

NiklasP #66110 11/12/07 11:04 PM
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Does anyone have experience with PB in low temps? Maybe down to 20 degrees F.


So many guns, so little time!
builder #66113 11/12/07 11:12 PM
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builder,

I used PB heavily for a year or two in the 1970s, in loads having about 9K psi. Don't recall any problems. I switched to IMR SR7625 at similar pressures and had no problems on those few days ice formed along the Texas Gulf Coast. Probably had some of those rare days too when using PB. Don't even recall now for sure why I switched to 7625.

Niklas

NiklasP #66156 11/13/07 08:46 AM
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Standard atmospheric temperature is around 60 F. Most testing would be near to that temperature.

2-piper #66208 11/13/07 01:35 PM
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700X for me also for many years for my waterfowl loads. I used to have the old Mark V Winchester/Western cases occasionally split right down the middle when hunting in cold (<-10F) weather, but not for years. They must have changed their plastic composition slightly.

#66212 11/13/07 02:00 PM
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The one point(I think) that has not been addressed in this thread as well as other threads in the past is the role of the primer. When the temperature get low, the efficiency of the primer deteriorates on two levels. One is the thermal heat sink issue of the primer stuck and surrounded by the metallic shot shell rim. When the temperature gets lower, the lead staphinate (primary explosive)will ignite as well and as quickly as at higher temperature. However, if the primer cup is cold, a substantial amount of the brisance (explosive umph for a lack of better terms)is disipated by the cold copper/brass cowling about the primer cup. I've taken a chunk of dry ice and placed the shot shell base on it for a few moments, enough to get it frosty without cooling down the powder which is insulated by the base wad. Then I stuck it quickly in the gun, so it did not have time to heat up substantially and pulled the trigger. Bloobers or no ignition (WW shells). I haven't done this, but what would be cool is to take the upper part of the shell containing the shot and the powder, wrap it with cloth and ice or dry ice for a bit while keeping the base brass warm and see what happens. Grant it that it isn't too scientific, but this might be an interesting Armbruster like approach to study ignition, shell pressure and fps analysis using a chronometer with different primers and powders.

Iggy

kopkai #66225 11/13/07 03:25 PM
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Sorry, I mispoke, the base wad is over the powder, I meant the plastic shell casing, Again, I did this with low brass Winchester 12 out of the box trap loads

2-piper #66226 11/13/07 03:25 PM
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Black powder works really excellent in very cold whether I should know. This is written 100 miles north of the Arctic Circle and it is -18C°just this moment.

snowman #66241 11/13/07 05:04 PM
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Welcome to the board, snowman. Iqualiut, Nunavut or Alaska?

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