Originally Posted by
sabotloader
UtahRob
Where you live - i would not even worry about it. I live north of you and have never had any problems at all. T7 will absorb moisture but nothing like Pyro or real BP, in fact T7 has a clear coating on it that helps resist moisture. That is also why it needs more heat to ignite it. Some time just for an experiment, put some cold water in a small open container. Then gently pour in a partial spoon full of T7 - I will sink right to the bottom form an inverted cone and it will remain in that cone unitl it is is agitated, if you were to do the same thing with real BP or Pyro - you would produce a black sludge. If you had the time to wait for the water to evaporate and the powder to dry - you could shoot it..
sound like a very good powder !!
Yep its very dry here .
I get a lot of photos printed on canvas and stretched , but had to stop . I get them done in Texas and the very dry winters we have here made the frames warp but in the summer when i turn the swamp cooler on they straighten right back . They look great on the wall right now !! I had to remove most of them from the wood frames and then get the print mounted on foam and put into normal frames . I no longer get them stretched on wood . So yes it is very dry here , but that sure makes the winters not seem so cold !!!