Monday, August 23, 2010

Does anyone know the mixture for Black Powder?(Gunpowder)?

I am trying to find the composition of Black Powder and i think that is is charcoal,sulfer,pottasium or something like that. PLease include the quantity of each ingredient as they are crucial for my research.Does anyone know the mixture for Black Powder?(Gunpowder)?
';By weight measure, black powder is made of seventy-five parts saltpeter finely ground, fifteen parts charcoal, and ten parts sulfur. All ingredients must be fine ground separately. This can be accomplished with either a mortar and pestle, or with a hand-cranked flour mill. Never mix all three ingredients before grinding unless you want to turn your mill into a deadly grenade, or your mortar into a cannon that can blow off your fingers or even your hand.';





Dont forget that gunpowder is a low-explosive. it will not explode in the open atmosphere, but will explode under compretion. In other words, dont keep it in an airtight container.


BE CAREFULL!!! Remember, flamible things tend to burn!;-)Does anyone know the mixture for Black Powder?(Gunpowder)?
sulfer,carbon%26amp;potasium. I believe in equal amounts.
Gunpowder, explosive powder used in ballistics, specifically, black powder, an explosive mixture of about 75 per cent potassium nitrate, 15 per cent charcoal, and 10 per cent sulphur. Gunpowder was the first explosive known. The formula for gunpowder appears in the writings of the 13th-century English monk Roger Bacon, but it seems to have been discovered by the Chinese, who had used it in firecrackers several hundred years before his time. Gunpowder was probably introduced into Europe from the Middle East. Berthold Schwarz, a German monk of the early 14th century, may have been the first person to employ gunpowder for propelling a projectile. Whatever the precise dates and identities of its first discoverers and users, it is certain that gunpowder was manufactured in England in 1334 and that powder-manufacturing plants existed in Germany in 1340. In the time of Elizabeth I, the manufacture of gunpowder was conducted as a monopoly of the Crown. Regulations relating to gunpowder in England date from about 1623. It was the only explosive known until the discovery of fulminating gold, a powerful explosive first used in 1628 in European wars
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