I first started using IMR7383 from Hi-Tech in April of 2003 and with the first shipment was a spec sheet reprinted from H.P. White Laboratories. The spec sheet listed several lots of IMR7383 and what grabbed my attention were the differences in characteristics between them. The particular lot of IMR7383 I got from Hi-Tech was not identified and the only way I could correlate my powder with the ones listed on the spec sheet was by the weight that would fill a particular manufacturer's .30-06 case. Thankfully there was enough disparity in bulk density between the various lots so identifying them that way was possible.
I ran several performance tests and what got my attention immediately was the chameleon-like behavior of the powder. It varied so much in performance from one caliber to the next that it was not possible for me classify the particular lot that I had as being like one particular powder. The stuff ranged from IMR4831-like to IMR4064-like. Its behavior depended on the cartridge, charge weight, and weight of bullet it was used with. When that occurs sirens and red warning lights should go off in your head, because the pressure-time curve characteristics of the powder are affected drastically by conditions that are normally minor for other powders.
NotRicochet and I are friends and we quite often share information and collaborate on projects. Both of us are chemists (he's an M.D., too) and we are also pretty well versed in physics. When we first started using IMR7383 we compared notes and found that we had made a lot of the same observations independently. One of the observations he made about IMR7383 is that it produces a lot of ammonia initially during combustion, which is the first gas in the stratified gas column to exit from a gun barrel and indicates its origin as being from a coating on the powder grains. Another observation is IMR7383�s chemistry is different from the others in the IMR series and contains a compound that decomposes into large amounts hydrogen cyanide when gently heated. Pyroxylin by itself doesn't do this, and most of the IMR series are single-base pyroxylin powders all with the same basic composition but with varying shapes and deterrents used to control pressure-time characteristics. I did some other simple chemical tests and what the results of our observations point at are that IMR7383 probably contains nitroguanidine. That compound is used in high-energy powders, which IMR7383 seems to be.
Nitroguanidine also has the characteristic of preventing muzzle flash, and that is a highly desirable characteristic for a powder used for spotter or pilot rounds.
Another feature of IMR7383 is that its tubular grains have extremely thin walls, which accounts for its bulk density being approximately 7/8 of powders like IMR4350 and IMR4895. That in itself could account for the powder's seemingly fickle behavior because as the powder column is initially collapsed inside the cartridge when first ignited, the powder grain tubes collapse and diminish the exposed area, which in turn slows the burn rate. That could in effect act as a pressure limiting mechanism. If something disrupts this mechanism, like an especially violent priming compound, then the powder would behave as a faster burning member of the IMR series PLUS also having a very high energy content!
I have about 70 pounds of the stuff and intend to use it for both cast and mild jacketed loads in various .30 cal milsurps. I make all of my loads as though it were IMR4064 and accept the results without pushing it. Like the guy said, it doesn�t take much to punch holes in paper. Be careful!
