Sorry guys, but if I shoot a heavy Reloader7 (slow powder) load from my 5.5" Blackhawk, you get about a 3 foot long fireball... If I shoot the same load from a 14" Contender, I get a very short fireball and if I shoot it in my 20" colt carbine, I get zero fireball...
I'm kinda confused there Tack...
Happens a lot the older I get.
Anyway, are you saying the longer the barrel the shorter the fireball phenomenon is caused by more of the propellant being consumed by the longer barrel, and so there is less powder to ignite outside the barrel, hence the smaller the flash?
Powder is consumed at a fixed rate depending on it's burn rate
Without question
that's why there's a chart and % of burn rate in Quickload and similar programs.
I know nothing (I sound like Sgt. Schultz!
) about that % of burn (I'm assuming it is % of propellant consumed) in Quickload; I need to research that issue.
But, it would be interesting to see what the percentages are for Reloader 7 out of your 3 barrel lengths. If it shows a lot of unconsumed powder out of the short barrel and no powder unconsumed out of the carbine barrel, that would be pretty darn conclusive evidence in favor of your position!
It would also interject another factor into load development that hasn't been a major factor since the introduction of smokeless powder; barrel length! I mean, why would you even want to develop a load around a powder that wouldn't be totally consumed in the barrel of the weapon it was fired in? After all, it is the expanding gases that propell the bullet, not ejecta!