I never used or saw this powder. Yup, I am from the backwoods. My question is what does it look like? I have found info on the powder but none describing its appearence. Is it ball, flake, granular, I would like to know. Thank you
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I never used or saw this powder. Yup, I am from the backwoods. My question is what does it look like? I have found info on the powder but none describing its appearence. Is it ball, flake, granular, I would like to know. Thank you
Here's Reloder 7
https://www.ilrc.ucf.edu/powders/sam...hp?powder_id=7
Main page
https://www.ilrc.ucf.edu/powders/search.php
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Note; The Old Reloader7 had Red Flecks in it....New??? IDK
I've only had two jugs of Reloader7. I bought the first in 1987 and second about 2012. The powder in both of them was dark gray, not gold, as shown at the first link above. I just had a thorough eye exam yesterday and my color vision is excellent. (Perhaps the current product is gold colored.)
I have used this powder in my .222 with very good results. Lots of dead woodchucks.
Thanks so much this answers most of my question. I have a friend drop off some powder from his late father. It is flakes with some red particles in it. The flakes look kinda like Imr 700x.
Nice charts on the various Alliant propellants. I have been using Reloader No.7 since it was introduced in the late 1980's. My guns are much older than I am. 45-70 and 50-70 Springfield Trapdoors as well as original Sharps 50-70's have always kept me reloading and shooting my cast boolits. Shooting an original 50-70 Sharps I have noticed how much protrusion occurs of the primer and extraction of fired cased. Now this is just my observations. The greater the chamber pressure the greater the fired primer obturates into the large firing pin hole in the Sharps breech block. The force required to open the sliding breech block increases as the chamber pressure increases. I always observe the fired primer. Black powder pushes the primers into the firing pin hole also but not as much as when loading smokeless/ cast lead boolits. Have tried many, many smokeless propellants: IMR 4227, 4198, SR4759, 2400, WIN 680, 5744, Unique, & Reloader No. 7 Out of all of them, the comparable velocities achieved using Reloader No.7 resulted in lower lever/opening force required to open the breech block of my Sharps rifles. Newer Shiloh Sharps 1874 cannot be used as their breech blocks have a small firing pin and breech block hole. My heavy hunting loads for bustin' Bambi that resulted in fine accuracy and low pressure was with Reloader No.7 It is my favorite go-to propellant.
I keep a couple of lbs of Rx7 for a wide variety of calibers from 300blk/277wlv to larger rifles.
Very versatile & cleaner too, kinda pricy nowadays though
I have a pound that I intend to work up in 7.62x39, in which it seems to work just fine. Two friends who shoot .45-70 absolutely swear by it for loads of all power levels. Since I still have not opened the bottle I bought, I can't comment on the propellant's appearance. Sorry.
nekshot, My, recently made and consumed, can of RE-7 had dark gray powder sans any colorants other than the powder itself. Moreover, I would describe it as a short cut extruded powder, something like broken mechanical pencil leads in appearance.
I relooked at this powder and it looks as you said short broken pieces of pencil lead. The flecks of red are very remote but occasionally you see one. I wander what I was looking at last that I could have sworn was flakes!!!
I use it in 32-20 and 44-40 - a favorite in both.
Alliant reloder 7 doesn't have markers.
Hercules reloder 7 has brown markers...that probably look somewhat red to old eyes.
Hercules RL-7, is this Hercules reloder 7?
Two versions, one appears to have red and green, one just red.
https://www.ilrc.ucf.edu/powders/sea...splay_image=20
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been using it for decades [ both Hercules + Alliant ] + never had any with colored dots - personally i would err on side of caution + not use it for anything but fertilizer -
In the 1970s, Hercules Reloader 7, 11, and 21 were double based powders with colored bits mixed in with the grey- black bits. They came in a square metal can with a pop off lid.
Re 7 was the only one reintroduced in later years.
At least that’s how I remember it.
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just checked 2 sealed cardboard 1 lb. containers by Hercules + 1 sealed 1 lb. plastic container of Alliant RL7 - none had any colored taggants at all - jmho imagine the severe legal jeopardy the manufacturer would face if someone loaded red dot pistol powder into any rifle cartridges using RL7 specs -