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powder # question

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9 comments

  • Hawk Carse
    If the IMR number series means anything, I haven't been able to figure it out.
    From "fast" to "slow" 4227, 4198, 3031,4895,4320,4064,4350,4831,7828.
    If there is a code there, it is way over my head.

    True, some Hodgdon powder designations have meaning, but there is no consistent system about it.
    As said, H380 = 38.0 grains in .22-250
    HP38 = Hodgdon Powder .38 special
    Trap 100 = Guaranteed to shoot 100 straight at trap.
    HS6 = Hodgdon Shotgun powder no 6.

    But what does H414 signify? I don't know.
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  • Mobuck
    Some of those were around before WW2 so maybe there was a pattern then but I don't think it's been followed lately. Didn't Bruce Hodgdon name H380 because his 22/250 load with the new powder was 38 grains?
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  • bpost
    quote:Originally posted by Mobuck
    Some of those were around before WW2 so maybe there was a pattern then but I don't think it's been followed lately. Didn't Bruce Hodgdon name H380 because his 22/250 load with the new powder was 38 grains?


    Yes, that is how H-380 got its name.
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  • Rocky Raab
    Accurate and Alliant have chosen to number their powders in burn rate sequence, where a higher number means a slower burn rate. But none of them are "calibrated" to a standard. So you still can't definitively say "If this is the number, then this is its exact burn rate."

    I think IMR just spins a wheel and whatever comes up is the number.
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  • Rocky Raab
    So, on a list like that, where it shows H110 and W296 on two different lines, and also H414 and W760, and likewise HP38 and W231, which one is slower - because in all three instances, they are the EXACT same powder?

    If identical powders are on different adjacent lines, what can you discern about every other powder and the powder on the next line?

    Answer: Not one damn thing.
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  • Toolfogie
    Very interesting.
    Are there any other powders that are exactly the same?
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  • Rocky Raab
    Yes. HS-6 is W540 and HS-7 is W571. I believe that W571 has been discontinued.
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  • noylj
    Relative Burn Rate is truly relative.
    For some cartridges, Red Dot is faster than Bullseye.
    If you compare three different burn rate charts, you will get three different lists.
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  • 5mmgunguy
    I think HS-7 has been discontinued too.
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