Smokeless Powder in a Muzzleloader?

Published on October 14, 2015
Duration: 20:25

This video demonstrates the extreme dangers of using smokeless powder in a muzzleloader. Tests show that even slow-burning smokeless powders like H110 cause significant barrel bulging and stock damage, while fast-burning powders like Titegroup lead to catastrophic failures, including barrel splitting and complete breech vaporization. The experiments highlight the critical importance of using only black powder or approved substitutes in muzzleloading firearms to prevent severe injury or death.

Quick Summary

Never use smokeless powder in a muzzleloader. Smokeless powders generate pressures far exceeding the design limits of muzzleloading firearms, leading to catastrophic failures like barrel bulging, splitting, or explosion, posing extreme risks of severe injury or death.

Chapters

  1. 00:00Intro: Muzzleloader Safety Issues
  2. 01:26Black Powder Double Charge Test
  3. 02:46Full Barrel Black Powder Test
  4. 06:39Smokeless Powder Test: H110
  5. 11:13Smokeless Powder Test: Titegroup
  6. 15:13Extreme Failure Test: Lethal Results

Frequently Asked Questions

Can you use smokeless powder in a muzzleloader?

No, you absolutely cannot use smokeless powder in a muzzleloader. Smokeless powders generate significantly higher pressures than black powder, leading to catastrophic firearm failure, barrel bulging, splitting, or even complete destruction, posing extreme risks of severe injury or death.

What happens if you put smokeless powder in a muzzleloader?

Putting smokeless powder in a muzzleloader results in dangerously high pressure spikes. This can cause the barrel to bulge, split, or explode, damage the stock, and send shrapnel in all directions. It is an extremely dangerous practice that should never be attempted.

What is the difference between black powder and smokeless powder for muzzleloaders?

Black powder is a low-explosive propellant designed for muzzleloaders, producing lower pressures. Smokeless powder is a high-explosive propellant used in modern cartridges, generating much higher pressures that muzzleloaders are not designed to withstand, making it unsafe for use.

Is it safe to use H110 or Titegroup in a muzzleloader?

No, it is extremely unsafe to use H110 or Titegroup, or any smokeless powder, in a muzzleloader. These powders create pressures far exceeding the design limits of muzzleloading firearms, leading to dangerous failures like barrel bulging or splitting, as demonstrated in tests.

Related News

All News →

More Reviews Videos You Might Like

More from Iraqveteran8888

View all →