George is always sending me PMÂ’s letting me know that I failed to dot an I or cross a T. A day or two ago he sent me a message pointing out in a reference I made about determining safe loads that there is not 480 grs. Av. in an ounce. Yep you are right George. As I recall that info came from the linked source. When I went to the linked source to confirm, lo and behold the link doesnÂ’t work. So here is the correction and it no longer contains the reference to avoirdupois weight.
National Safety Rules and Procedures
for Shooting Muzzleloading Artillery, as adapted by the American Artillery Association March 20001. Powder charges should not exceed 2 oz. of Fg or 3 oz. FFA or Cannon Grade Goex powder per inch of bore diameter. No excessive charges. Use black powder only.
2. Prepare powder charges in advance using heavy duty aluminum foil. Baggies may be used inside the foil, taking care not to allow excess air in the baggies and removing excess plastic where unnecessary.
While working on the update I also found that the there is a difference in the safety rules from the various Cannon shooting groups.
Artillery Safety A service of The Civil War News: New Black powder Regulations January 2003.
1. Maximum blank powder charges for properly constructed guns of 3-inch bore or larger should not exceed 2 oz. of Fg grade or 3 oz. of Cannon Grade GOEX black powder per inch of bore diameter. Maximum powder charge for bore of more than 2 inches and less than 3 inches should not exceed a total of 3 oz. Fg or 4 oz. Cannon Grade. Use reduced loads with projectiles. (See North-South Skirmish Association regulations for a guide to projectile weights and powder charges.)
2. Prepare powder charges in advance using light-weight plastic baggies with end twisted closed. Leave 2 inches of twist; cut off excess plastic. Fold twist to bag. Enclose bag in a triple layer of double-thickness heavy-duty aluminum foil (six layers total). Take care not to break plastic baggie. The bag prevents escape of powder dust and keeps granules from getting trapped under folds of aluminum to help insure complete burning. (Aluminum foil wormed out after firing often yields unburned powder although this may appear impossible to those familiar with smaller caliber guns.)
Both sites make reference to blanks
AAA says:
9. No wadding shall be used at any time. This includes firing blanks.
Besides the distinct reference in Rule 1 CWN says:
10. When blank firing no wadding should be used nor should be necessary for a realistic report.
I will update the FAQÂ’s and ad an FAQ for blanks.
For the record, although it no longer appears in the rules all weights are avoirdupois. And yes George that is 7000 grs. to the pound, 437.5 to the ounce.