Ever since my Harrell (Schuentzen) measure went beserk at the NBRSA Nationals, I've been milling up more accurate versions that dispense only within the range 28--31 gr of N133. (I sent back the Schuentzen but Harrell says nothing is amiss in spite of its tolerances rattling like a service 1911 and in spite of it throwing errors of .4 grs.)
I need a recommendation of a coating like teflon that will adhere to aluminium and 'repel' N133. It should not only be smooth/slick when set but also have surface charge to repel the sticks of powder. I'm hoping someone else has already done the experimentation.
P.S. By the way, a neat idea I've been trying is to exploit the conductivity of N133 (10kOhm/inch) to make a powder pump using the force generated by a current thru the powder pependicular to a strong magnetic field. I've also tried precision timing with NE555 activation of tiny solenoids in a drop tube with no success --- the armature cuts powder and does not reliably close. Ah, the joys of retirement.
Chuck
I need a recommendation of a coating like teflon that will adhere to aluminium and 'repel' N133. It should not only be smooth/slick when set but also have surface charge to repel the sticks of powder. I'm hoping someone else has already done the experimentation.
P.S. By the way, a neat idea I've been trying is to exploit the conductivity of N133 (10kOhm/inch) to make a powder pump using the force generated by a current thru the powder pependicular to a strong magnetic field. I've also tried precision timing with NE555 activation of tiny solenoids in a drop tube with no success --- the armature cuts powder and does not reliably close. Ah, the joys of retirement.
Chuck