I don't wish to start a problem but there is a post on another site that causes me to question the statement and I would like your input without stirring the pot of dissent so here goes the the thread;
Detonation can occur even at low pressure with a very light powder charge and with the same results...leading the shooter and spectators to assume that a double charge caused it. When it happens in revolvers, it often breaches adjacent chambers and sympathetically sets off the rounds in them...and the resulting explosion is spectacular and dangerous.
Smokeless powder is designed to burn progressively from back to front...much like the flame front in a combustion chamber that lights at the spark plug and travels across the piston. Like a combustion chamber, if the fuel is lit all at once...you have detonation...spark knock's ugly step-sister. It can knock the tops out of pistons and crush rod bearings. Detonation in a gun generally unwraps the gun the first time it happens.
When a too-light powder charge is in a case, it tends to lay flat, exposing the primer flash hole. When the spark comes, instead of punching through the powder charge, it moves unimpeded along the length of it...lighting it all at once, so instead of the charge burning progressively from back to front...it literally explodes...or detonates...setting off the destructive shock wave that blows the chamber.
It's a rarity with undercharges. The conditions have to be just right. The same applies to an overcharge. It's just easier to bring on the detonation with large powder charges and pressure jumps because of the property of smokeless powder to burn faster as the pressure goes up. If you happen to hit the sweet spot with a particular powder and charge weight...ka-flippin'-blooey.
Detonation can occur even at low pressure with a very light powder charge and with the same results...leading the shooter and spectators to assume that a double charge caused it. When it happens in revolvers, it often breaches adjacent chambers and sympathetically sets off the rounds in them...and the resulting explosion is spectacular and dangerous.
Smokeless powder is designed to burn progressively from back to front...much like the flame front in a combustion chamber that lights at the spark plug and travels across the piston. Like a combustion chamber, if the fuel is lit all at once...you have detonation...spark knock's ugly step-sister. It can knock the tops out of pistons and crush rod bearings. Detonation in a gun generally unwraps the gun the first time it happens.
When a too-light powder charge is in a case, it tends to lay flat, exposing the primer flash hole. When the spark comes, instead of punching through the powder charge, it moves unimpeded along the length of it...lighting it all at once, so instead of the charge burning progressively from back to front...it literally explodes...or detonates...setting off the destructive shock wave that blows the chamber.
It's a rarity with undercharges. The conditions have to be just right. The same applies to an overcharge. It's just easier to bring on the detonation with large powder charges and pressure jumps because of the property of smokeless powder to burn faster as the pressure goes up. If you happen to hit the sweet spot with a particular powder and charge weight...ka-flippin'-blooey.