cfplinker
Member
This would be the waste of a good "dime"! You know the answer will be based on LIABILITY!
In the front of every loading manual I've ever read (blasphemy I know) there is a caution to "never" mix powders even if they appear to be the same!
Smiles,
I've asked them twice. The first time was regarding 4 - 1 pound containers of 231 that were of fairly recent manufacture. Their response was that it was up to me but that I should make sure that they were all 231 or HP38 and make sure that they had all been properly stored. I accepted that responsibility and mixed them by combining 1/4 cup of each, mixing them thoroughly, adding another 1/4 cup of each, mixing etc. The accuracy loads were withing 0.2 grains of the accuracy load for the last can I had opened.
The second was for H110, where the new cans were only a few years old but the old can was well over 15 years old. The response said NOT to do it because there was no way to insure that the two batches would be thoroughly mixed. So I didn't. The results of my testing showed that the velocities I had for the old can were vastly different than the velocities for the new when loaded with the same charge.
I'm glad I followed their advice in both cases. The decision as to mix or not mix is up to the user and that user must accept the responsibility for his/her decision. If you decide to mix lots of the same powder, and there have been many on this thread who have done it successfully, you are accepting that responsibility. All we are doing is telling you what our individual decisions were and how they turned out. We don't know how old your powders are, how they have been stored, how much you have of each batch etc. so we are operating with incomplete information.
As you said above, the safest way is to not mix powders.