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  2. Hodgdon Powder Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hodgdon_Powder_Company

    Consequences of black powder's easy ignition by sparks or static electricity make manufacture and storage hazardous. The sole factory of the United States' largest 20th-century black powder manufacturer was closed by an accidental explosion as 1970 legislation established new regulations discouraging merchants from stocking black powder for sale.

  3. Cordite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cordite

    Cordite is a family of smokeless propellants developed and produced in Britain since 1889 to replace black powder as a military firearm propellant. Like modern gunpowder, cordite is classified as a low explosive because of its slow burning rates and consequently low brisance [not verified in body].

  4. Gunpowder - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gunpowder

    The term black powder was coined in the late 19th century, primarily in the United States, to distinguish prior gunpowder formulations from the new smokeless powders and semi-smokeless powders. Semi-smokeless powders featured bulk volume properties that approximated black powder, but had significantly reduced amounts of smoke and combustion ...

  5. California Powder Works - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/California_Powder_Works

    California Powder Works manufactured powder for naval artillery. Initial production was prismatic brown powder, [1] and the works later obtained a license to produce The United States Navy's patented nitrocellulose smokeless powder. [4] Both powders were used by the Pacific Fleet and the Asiatic fleet, and for Pacific harbor and coast defense ...

  6. Smokeless powder - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smokeless_powder

    Finnish smokeless powder. Smokeless powder is a type of propellant used in firearms and artillery that produces less smoke and less fouling when fired compared to black powder. Because of their similar use, both the original black powder formulation and the smokeless propellant which replaced it are commonly described as gunpowder.

  7. Black powder substitute - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_powder_substitute

    A black powder substitute is a replacement for black powder (gunpowder), primarily used in muzzleloading firearms. Substitutes may have slightly different properties from gunpowder such as: reduced sensitivity as an explosive, increased efficiency as a propellant powder, different density, and/or reduced ignition efficiency.

  8. Berthold Schwarz - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Berthold_Schwarz

    Portrait identifying Schwarz as the "inventor of artillery" Berthold Schwarz O.F.M. (sometimes spelled Schwartz), also known as Berthold the Black and der Schwartzer, was a legendary German (or in some accounts Danish or Greek) alchemist of the late 14th century, credited with the invention of gunpowder by 15th- through 19th-century European literature.

  9. .45 Black Powder Magnum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/.45_Black_Powder_Magnum

    The .45 BPM can be handloaded using a .460 S&W Magnum brass casing, a standard large pistol primer, from 40 grains black powder with filler as necessary to avoid air gaps on up to 60 grains black powder. A typical bullet would consist of soft lead from 150 to 250 grains in weight with a black powder appropriate lubricant in the groove(s).