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Gunslinger1911
11-14-2020, 07:16 PM
This was in a box of assorted reloading stuff I picked up. Couple cans of newer powder, some dies, maybe 50 lbs assorted lead or alloy.
I'm guessing 50's -60's ?
Half full, not even thinking of using it (open can, old). Just a cool can to put on the shelf.
271430

Martin Luber
11-14-2020, 08:08 PM
Old? open? So?

Use it!

Conditor22
11-14-2020, 08:41 PM
Smell it - test it

I got several pounds of 2400 out of a cardboard barrel that worked great

Don Purcell
11-15-2020, 04:12 PM
My first can of H-110 was like that and that was in 1978.

Jniedbalski
11-15-2020, 04:30 PM
It looks like it has a price tag on it. How much is on it?

Gunslinger1911
11-15-2020, 08:16 PM
It looks like it has a price tag on it. How much is on it?

$8.05 for the pound!

I have a 4 lb jug of 296, just not worth taking any chances, haha

ACC
11-15-2020, 11:12 PM
This was in a box of assorted reloading stuff I picked up. Couple cans of newer powder, some dies, maybe 50 lbs assorted lead or alloy.
I'm guessing 50's -60's ?
Half full, not even thinking of using it (open can, old). Just a cool can to put on the shelf.
271430

Nope late 70's. My brother and I started to use H-110 when Winchester stopped making W630. It is great in the .357. The first cans we bought where rectangle shape then they came in those round cans. My brother and I burned up a lot of H-110 back in those days.

ACC

Eddie Southgate
11-16-2020, 07:20 PM
Smell it , no strange smell , use it . Not likely to be anything wrong with it .

Geezer in NH
11-21-2020, 10:01 PM
Old powder to me has to be before WWII

Winger Ed.
11-21-2020, 10:08 PM
If it looks and smells OK, I'd use it.
Especially in reduced, target loads.

beagle
11-22-2020, 12:24 AM
That was the second generation can and after the 60s. Hodgdon started out packaging surplus M1 Carbine powder in the late 50s. It came in a metal can covered with an orange paper wrapper at as I recall $1.60 per pound can. 4831 was marketed the same way in the same style cans at $1.00 per pound. If you were frugal, they went in back and scooped 4831 out of a 40 pound can and sold it at $.80 per pound in a doubled paper bag.
After they found out the money in the surplus powder market, they marketed the can pictured above. I started loading in 1958, went into the Army in 1966 and those cans were just hitting the shelves./beagle

tunnug
11-22-2020, 01:17 AM
Just going to start loading 300 BLK with H110, the bottle I pulled out looks the same as yours but is rectangular, somewhat remember buying it off a customer when I saw reloading stuff in the garage while I worked at his house about 20 yrs ago, no idea how long he had it, still sealed.

cp1969
11-22-2020, 01:24 AM
Loading manuals used to carry a warning not to reduce H110 published loads by more than 3%. I don't know if that's still true.

MrHarmless
11-22-2020, 02:04 AM
Loading manuals used to carry a warning not to reduce H110 published loads by more than 3%. I don't know if that's still true.

It's still a good idea. I've adjusted it as a function of case volume before to work closer to 5 percent with .50 Beowulf for a starting load, since Anderson Arms only provided the max for some H110 loads. That's around 42 grains of powder though. For everything else, I start with the suggested data.

Duckiller
01-30-2021, 04:24 PM
Do not reduce H110 or Win 296 loads. They are the same powder. They need high pressure of max or near max loads to work properly. If you are not going to use the H110 give it to someone who will use it, don't waste good powder and it is good powder.