pushmar wrote:
The rifling twist rate on black power is way too "slow" - around 48-54 turns per inch, whereas smokeless power requires a faster twist rate, say, 1o to 18 TPI, depending on diameter (caliber) and bullet weight.
The twist rate needed for a particular gun is based on how fast you need to spin the bullet in flight to stabilize it. The velocity of the round and the bullet weight (which decides the bullet length since diameter is dictated by the bore diameter) are the defining factors. Propellent isn't a factor.
Using smokeless just means you have a capability to increase the velocity of a BP designed round. It doesn't automatically mean that the velocity increase will happen. It is quite possible (and easy) to duplicate the external ballistics of a BP era round using smokeless powder. Ammunition manufacturers do it every time they load a 250gr .45Colt round to 850-900fps and, as a reloader, I've done it countless times over the last 20 years for everything from .45 Colt to .44 Bulldog.
pushmar wrote:
Not to mention - have you ever seen a black-powder weapon loaded with smokeless powder? You'd be lucky to keep your fingers or hand on after. The chamber pressures are much higher with smokeless.
Unless, or course, the M96's were designed to handle that higher chamber pressure.
My 2 cents.
I've seen it done a lot but I won't do it personally. There are a LOT of original BP era shotguns that have been shot using smokeless powder that haven't had a catastrophic failure- including Damascus barreled guns. I won't take that chance and advise others to avoid it as well.
Actually, all of John Moses Browning's designs made the transition from BP to smokeless without any redesign. It was necessary in a couple cases to change manufacturing techniques or materials (like the Model 1887 Winchester barrels were made by using a mandrel and welding instead of the fluid steel barrels used in the subsequent Model 1901) but the actual designs were strong enough to make the transition unchanged.
If the design is 'overbuilt' (as military guns tend to be) enough for BP cartridges and the metallurgy is good enough (and it should be- RFC has stated numerous times that Safehold's metal working capabilities are par with early 20th Century Earth), then there's no need to rebuild or redesign the gun to shoot smokeless. All you have to do is match the velocity of the BP round and use the same bullet.
I figure the gun was designed with the transition in mind- via Owl's computational abilities and Howsyn's steering and input, so I'm not overly concerned.