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There is a market for anything that can give people who have the money a sense of comfort.I'm curious if I am the only one? Does anyone else use an exacto knife to cut kernels in half? I'm thinking of making a kernel splitter that will retail around $300 bucks. Will there be a market?
Win a Match using it and You won’t be able to keep up with ordersI'm curious if I am the only one? Does anyone else use an exacto knife to cut kernels in half? I'm thinking of making a kernel splitter that will retail around $300 bucks. Will there be a market?
Then the question should be: Show me the person, any caliber, who can shoot the difference of plus or minus 1 single grain of any powder …..I load for 1000 yard BR, my scale will resolve very close to one kernel of H 4895, it takes about 6 kernels ( .1gr) to significantly change the target at that distance.
quite a large number of Short Range Shooters use N133. If you have ever taken a look at 133, you will see that no two kernels are even the same.I'm curious if I am the only one? Does anyone else use an exacto knife to cut kernels in half? I'm thinking of making a kernel splitter that will retail around $300 bucks. Will there be a market?

It’s easy to estimate an average value. If 1.0 grain changes velocity by 50 fps, then a single .02gr kernel is worth 1fps. But its near impossible to measure directly.I wonder when guys start discussing how one kernel has a fps value of X and has a vertical factor of Y, just how they arrive at that beyond speculation or theory.
Then the question should be: Show me the person, any caliber, who can shoot the difference of plus or minus 1 single grain of any powder …..
Then the question should be: Show me the person, any caliber, who can shoot the difference of plus or minus 1 single grain of any powder …..
I already covered this. No one alive today can shoot the difference in +/- one kernel of powder. What we are getting by weighing powder to less than +/- one kernel range is that charge weight effectively is no longer a variable. When I'm lying behind the rifle at a match, knowing in my mind that velocity variance due to charge weight variance is never, ever, ever, EVER going to be an issue is worth something to me. If that peace of mind is not desirable or of any interest to someone, then they don't need to be weighing powder to +/- one kernel.waiting.....
Burn rate of a powder is not up to the grain size.Do smaller grains of an extruded powder, like Varget, burn faster or slower than larger grains?
What percentage of little grains compared to bigger grains do you get in a single charge?
The downrange effect on the target by a change to the load of 1 granule is lost in the noise of other variables.No one alive today can shoot the difference in +/- one kernel of powder.
Math does not lie.It’s easy to estimate an average value. If 1.0 grain changes velocity by 50 fps, then a single .02gr kernel is worth 1fps. But its near impossible to measure directly.
Actually the surface area of granules of powder is used as one of the primary methods of controlling burn rate. Here is an article that gets into the details.Burn rate of a powder is not up to the grain size.
All powders are coated to reduce the burn rate. Only the very fast pistol powders are uncoated. Nitrocellulose is grey in the pure form.
The amount of coating with the average mass of a granule is what determines burn rate.
Slower burning powders have more coating on them.
Not sure what that coating is, maybe graphite ?
