*CRYSTAL is a smokeless shot-gun powder made by Curtis’s and Harvey. It is a non-solvent powder for cheap loading, and the charge is thirty-three grains.

C.S.P.2 (Chilworth Smokeless Powder, No. 2) is a modification of Cordite, containing a little sodium bicarbonate as a stabiliser. It is stated to have been adopted by the Brazilian navy (see “Engineering” for August 18, 1911, p. 237) and other powers.

CUGNITE.—A French blasting explosive manufactured by the Société Française des Explosifs—

Nitroglycerine 27  
Nitrocotton 0·7
Ammonium nitrate   30  
Sodium nitrate 30  
Wood meal 11  
Barium sulphate 1·3

CURTISITE.—A coal-mine explosive of the Grisounite class made by Curtis’s and Harvey. It was formerly on the Permitted List—

Ammonium nitrate 88
Trinitro-toluene 8
Mononitro-naphthalene   4

SUPER-CURTISITE was a modification of the above to enable it to pass the Rotherham Test—

Date of Permit 7-4-14
Ammonium nitrate 38·5
Potassium nitrate 29·5
Trinitro-toluene 10  
Ammonium chloride   22  

Limit charge

16 oz.
Power (swing of ballistic pendulum)   2·71”

The permit has been repealed.

DAHMENITE is an ammonium nitrate explosive which has been used to a considerable extent in Germany. One variety known as Dahmenite A, made by De Gezamenlijke Buskruidmakers van Noord-Holland, was formerly on the British Permitted List for use in dangerous coal mines—

Ammonium nitrate 92·5
Naphthalene 5·5
Potassium bichromate   2  

Ordinary Dahmenite contains up to 15 per cent. of potassium nitrate instead of bichromate, and has been used for blasting clay. Some varieties contain curcuma meal and other constituents. The following are some examples—

    Gesteins-
Dahmenit.
  No. 76.
Ammonium nitrate 84·5 71·5
Potassium bichromate   2·5 0·5
Curcuma meal 12   6·25
Dinitro-benzene 1   —  
Trinitro-toluene —   12  
Sodium chloride —   9·75
  Gelatine
  Dahmenit.
Ammonium nitrate   82  
Sodium nitrate 5·5
Potassium nitrate 2  
Dinitro-glycerine 27·4
Nitrocotton 0·6
Naphthalene 0·5
Trinitro-toluene 4·5
Alkali chloride 27·5


Neu-Dahmenit.
  B  
Ammonium nitrate 68   65  
Potassium nitrate 2   2  
Vegetable meal 2·5 0·5
Coke 2   7  
Trinitro-toluene 10   8  
Alkali chloride 15·5 17·5

DENABY POWDER.—There was formerly a blasting explosive of this name, consisting of a compressed mixture of Securite and charcoal—

Potassium and barium nitrates   73·2
Dinitro-benzene 21·5
Nitrocotton and charcoal 5·1
Moisture 0·2

In 1914 a coal-mine explosive was introduced under the same name and passed the Rotherham Test—

Date of Permit 13-5-14
Ammonium nitrate 34  
Potassium nitrate 33·5
Trinitro-toluene 13  
Ammonium chloride 19·5

Limit charge

18 oz.
Power (swing of ballistic pendulum)   2·74”

It is made by British Westfalite, Ltd.

DENSITE.—A Belgian blasting explosive containing one or more of the following nitrates: ammonium, strontium, sodium, potassium; also trinitro-toluene, and sometimes dinitro-toluene and ammonium chloride. This explosive is practically the same as Nitralite. Varieties have been made for use in coal mines.
 See also Nitro-densite.

DETONIT V.—A German coal-mine explosive containing ammonium nitrate, charcoal, vegetable meal, neutral salts, and not more than 4 per cent. of blasting gelatine.

DETONITE SPECIAL is an American coal-mine explosive on the Permissible List. It contains ammonium nitrate.

DOMINITE.—A coal-mine explosive made by the Westphalia Anhalt Explosives Co. in Germany, and formerly on the British Permitted List—

Nitroglycerine 59·3
Nitrocotton 4  
Paraffin oil 0·7
Ammonium oxalate   8·5
Potassium nitrate 18·5
Potassium chloride 4  
Wood meal 5  

DOMINIT XI.—A German blasting explosive containing ammonium nitrate, dinitro-toluene, glycerine, and not more than 4 per cent. of blasting gelatine.

DOMINIT XVIII, which has been introduced recently, contains up to 10 per cent. of potassium perchlorate, and is practically the same as Astralit V.

DONARIT is a German blasting explosive of the Grisoutine type made by the Carbonite Co. of Hamburg. As a standard for the sensitiveness of ammonium nitrate explosives, the Imperial German Railway Commission use Donarit of the composition—

Ammonium nitrate   80
Trinitro-toluene 12
Rye flour 4
Nitroglycerine 4

and this may be taken as the usual composition of the explosive, but the nitroglycerine is sometimes gelatinised with collodion cotton.

DONARIT A contains up to 16 per cent. of aluminium powder and no nitroglycerine.

DONARIT V, which has been introduced recently, contains up to 10 per cent. of potassium perchlorate, and is practically the same as Astralit V.

Wetter-Donarit contains also sodium chloride or other cooling agent.

Gelatine-Donarit contains up to 20 per cent. of dinitro-chlorhydrin gelatinised with collodion cotton, in addition to the constituents of Donarit, and may also contain sodium nitrate.

DORFIT is a German coal-mine explosive made by the firm of Allendorf—

    I.   II.   Gesteins.
Ammonium nitrate   65 61 66  
Potassium nitrate 5 5 5  
Trinitro-toluene 6 15 15  
Flour 4 4 4  
Sodium chloride 20 15 10  

ALDORFIT is a simpler mixture intended for use where there is no danger of fire-damp—

Ammonium nitrate    81
Trinitro-toluene 17
Flour 2

It is authorised in Great Britain.

PERDORFIT contains not more than 52 per cent. of potassium perchlorate, sodium and ammonium nitrates, not more than 29 per cent. of trinitro-toluene and vegetable meal or gums.

DRAGONITE.—A coal-mine explosive made by Curtis’s and Harvey, formerly on the Permitted List—

Nitroglycerine 35·5
Nitrocotton 2·5
Potassium nitrate 44·5
Vaseline 5·5
Wood meal and charcoal   12  

DREADNOUGHT POWDER.—A coal-mine explosive made by Roburite and Ammonal, Ltd., for a time on the Permitted List—

Date of Permit 1-9-13
Ammonium nitrate 75·4
Trinitro-toluene 4  
Ammonium chloride   5  
Sodium chloride 15·5
Red oil 0·1

Limit charge

32 oz.
Power (swing of ballistic pendulum)   2·05”

There is also Quarry Dreadnought Powder, which is not a permitted explosive.

DUNNITE.—A high explosive used by the United States for filling shell. It is stated to give dangerous compounds with iron, so apparently is a compound of picric acid.

DU PONT PERMISSIBLE.—An American coal-mine explosive. The following is on the British Permitted List—

  No. 1.
Date of Permit 26-4-16
Nitroglycerine 9·5
Ammonium nitrate 67·5
Wood pulp 8  
Sodium chloride 15  

Limit charge

18 oz.
Power (swing of ballistic pendulum)   2·82”

*DU PONT SMOKELESS POWDER.—An American shot-gun powder of the fibrous 36-grain bulk type—

Soluble nitro-cellulose   95·8
Metallic nitrates 2·2
Moisture 2·0

DUXITE.—A coal-mine explosive made by the Westphalia Anhalt Explosives Co. It passed the Rotherham Test, and was for a time on the British Permitted List—

Nitroglycerine 32
Nitrocotton 1
Sodium nitrate 28
Wood meal 10
Ammonium oxalate   29

Limit charge

12 oz.
Power (swing of ballistic pendulum)   2·45”

Sicherheits Gallerte-DYNAMIT.—A German coal-mine explosive—

Nitroglycerine 32·25
Collodion cotton 1·25
Ammonium nitrate 22·6
Sodium nitrate 10·8
Vegetable meal 18  
Potassium chloride   5·5
Gelatine 1·05
Dextrin 1·05
Glycerine 4·3
Moisture 3·2

Limit charge

50 g.

Wettersicheres Gelatine-DYNAMIT.—A German coal-mine explosive—

  I.      Ia.  
Nitroglycerine 40   38  
Collodion cotton 1   1  
Ammonium nitrate 27   25·5
Potassium nitrate 4   5  
Ammonium oxalate —   2·5
Rye flour 10   4  
Liquid hydrocarbons    3·5 14  
Fatty acid salt 12·5 10  
Wood meal 2   —  

Limit charge

50  

100 g.

DYNAMITE is a name that has been given to various nitroglycerine explosives. Dynamite No. 1 consists of—

Nitroglycerine 75
Kieselguhr 25

the explosive being held in the pores of the kieselguhr. In other dynamites the nitroglycerine is absorbed in a material like wood meal, and a nitrate is added to oxidise the latter on explosion.

In Gelatine Dynamite the nitroglycerine is gelatinised with collodion cotton. See under Gelatine.

American Dynamites are not generally gelatinised with collodion cotton. They are made in a number of grades, depending on the percentage of nitroglycerine.

For further details about various dynamites, see textbooks on explosives.

DYNAMITE ANTIGRISOUTEUSE.—Belgian coal-mine explosive made at Baelen Wezel—

IV.   V.  
Nitroglycerine 24   Nitroglycerine 44
Collodion cotton 1   Sodium sulphate   44
Ammonium nitrate   75   Wood meal 12

Of the above, IV. was found only to be safe in very small charges in the presence of fire-damp. No. V. has a “charge limite” of 700 grammes.

DYNAMMON.—The coal-mine explosive provided by the Austrian State monopoly—

 
  Dynammon.  
Wetter-
Dynammon.
Ammonium nitrate 87-88 94
Potassium nitrate   2
Red charcoal 12-13 4
Density 0·9 0·85

DYNOBEL.—A coal-mine explosive made by Nobels. The first formula to pass the Rotherham Test contained potassium perchlorate—

Date of Permit 1-9-13
Nitroglycerine 33  
Collodion cotton 0·7
Potassium perchlorate 27  
Wood meal 10·3
Ammonium oxalate 29  

Limit charge

22 oz.
Power (swing of ballistic pendulum)   2·61”

Subsequently other formulæ of somewhat different composition passed the test—

  No. 2. No. 3. No. 4.
Date of Permit 16-8-15   14-4-16   14-4-16
Nitroglycerine 19·5 15   15  
Collodion cotton 0·5 0·5 0·5
Trinitro-toluene }      
 Dinitro-toluene } together 2   1·5 3  
Dinitro-benzene }      
Ammonium nitrate 42   52   46  
Wood meal 5·5 5·5 5·5
Sodium chloride 30   25   29·5
Magnesium carbonate 0·5 0·5 0·5

Limit charge

24  

18  

30 oz.
Power (swing of ballistic pendulum)  2·46 2·50 2·35”

Of these only Nos. 3 and 4 are still permitted.

*E.C. POWDER was one of the first smokeless shot-gun powders, and is still one of the most successful. The composition has been varied somewhat from time to time, but it has always been a fibrous bulk powder. The following analyses were given in “Arms and Explosives,” 1917, p. 76—

  No. 1. No. 2. No. 3.
Date of Introduction  1882 1890 1897
Class    42-grain   42-grain   33-grain
Nitrocotton, insoluble 30·0 15·9 44·0
”    soluble 28·2 41·0 30·4
Metallic nitrates 37·8 38·3 14·0
Resin 2·1 2·0
Vaseline 6·0
Camphor 1·0 4·0
Moisture 1·9 1·8 1·6

The powder is manufactured at Green Street Green, near Dartford in Kent. The name is derived from “Explosives Company.”

ECHO or EKKO is a blasting explosive made at Nitedal in Norway, consisting of ammonium nitrate, nitrocotton, trinitro-toluene, aluminium powder, and sometimes ferro-silicon. It has been used on the Continent for filling hand-grenades.

*ECONOMIC SMOKELESS SPORTING POWDER is a 42-grain bulk powder for shot-guns, made by the E.C. Powder Company.

ECRASITE or EKRASIT is a high explosive used in Austria for filling shell and other military purposes. It is the ammonium salt of trinitro-cresol.

ELECTRONITE.—There have been several explosives of this name, but none of them have been used extensively, and all are dead now. There was a coal-mine explosive formerly on the Permitted List—

Ammonium nitrate 73
Barium nitrate 19
Starch and slightly-charred wood meal   8

It was made by Curtis’s and Harvey.

ELEY SMOKELESS SPORTING POWDER is a shot-gun powder similar to E.C.

Ammon-ELSAGIT is a German coal-mine explosive. It contains ammonium nitrate, vegetable meal, not more than 6 per cent. of trinitro-toluene or other nitro-body, not more than 4 per cent. of blasting gelatine, and may also contain fatty oils, alkali chlorides or oxalate, and sodium or potassium nitrate.

Gesteins-ELSAGIT has much the same composition, but the percentage of trinitro-toluene may be raised to 12, and it contains no sodium or potassium nitrate.

*EMPIRE POWDER is a smokeless shot-gun powder introduced in 1902 by Nobel’s Explosives Company. It is a fibrous 33-grain bulk powder, and, according to an analysis published in “Arms and Explosives,” 1917, p. 77, its composition is—

Nitrocotton, insoluble   48·0
”    soluble 34·0
Metallic nitrates 9·0
Vaseline 7·0
Moisture 2·0

ERGITE.—A blasting explosive which was made for a few years in a factory in North Wales. Other explosives were also made under the names of Granergite, Shattergite, etc.

ERIN GELIGNITE.—A Gelignite containing a small percentage of dinitro-toluene to prevent the nitroglycerine freezing.

ESSEX POWDER.—A coal-mine explosive made by the Explosives and Chemical Products, Ltd. It is on the Permitted List—

Date of Permit 1-9-13
Nitroglycerine 23 
Nitrocotton
Potassium nitrate 34 
Wheat flour 36 
Ammonium chloride

Limit charge

38 oz.
Power (swing of ballistic pendulum)  2·17”

EUREKA No. 2 is an American coal-mine explosive on the Permissible List. It contains nitroglycerine and a hydrated salt.

EXCELLITE.—A coal-mine explosive formerly on the Permitted List—

Nitroglycerine 8  
Ammonium nitrate   82·5
Collodion cotton 1  
Dinitro-toluene 3  
Wood meal 4·5
Castor oil 1  

SUPER-EXCELLITE is a modification of this, containing salts as cooling agents. Three formulæ passed the Rotherham Test—

No. 2. No. 3.
Date of Permit   1-9-13   7-4-14   22-6-14
Nitroglycerine 4   5   9·5
Collodion cotton   —   0·5
Ammonium nitrate 75·5 50   59  
Potassium nitrate 7   20   —  
Starch 3·5 5   4·5
Castor oil —   1  
Ammonium chloride 5   —  
Sodium chloride —   15  
Ammonium oxalate 10   15   10·5

Limit charge

10  

14  

36 oz.
Power (swing of ballistic pendulum)   2·74 2·72 2·73”

It will be seen that all three are about equal as regards power, but that No. 3, which contains the largest proportion of cooling agents and more nitroglycerine, can be used safely in much greater charges. In 1916 807,000 lbs. of No. 3 were used in mines and quarries, principally in coal mines. It is recommended by the makers, Curtis’s and Harvey, for hard coal and colliery work generally. The permits of the others have been repealed.

EXPEDITE is a coal-mine explosive on the Permitted List made by Explosives and Chemical Products, Ltd.—

Date of Permit 25-11-13
Ammonium nitrate 35  
Potassium nitrate 33  
Trinitro-toluene 12  
Ammonium chloride   20  

Limit charge more than

32 oz.
Power (swing of ballistic pendulum)   2·62”

See also XPDITE.

EXPLOSIFS N, O, etc. See under respective letters.

EXTRA DYNAMITE is a variety of American dynamite containing ammonium nitrate.

FAVERSHAM POWDER is a coal-mine explosive of the Grisounite type made by the Cotton Powder Co. The mixture, which was on the old Permitted List, had the composition—

Ammonium nitrate   90
Trinitro-toluene 10

To make it pass the Rotherham Test, part of the ammonium nitrate was replaced by potassium nitrate, and ammonium chloride was added—

  No. 2.
Date of Permit 10-2-14
Ammonium nitrate 47·5
Potassium nitrate 24  
Ammonium chloride   18·5
Trinitro-toluene 10  

Limit charge

24 oz.
Power (swing of ballistic pendulum)   2·61”

but this also has now been repealed.

FAVIER explosives consist essentially of ammonium nitrate mixed with nitro-compounds. Favier took out patents in 1884 and 1885 for mixtures of ammonium nitrate with mononitro-naphthalene, paraffin and resin. Their manufacture was undertaken soon afterwards by the French Government, and is still continued under the names of Explosifs N, or Explosifs Favier or Grisounites. Their composition has been varied from time to time, but the following are those now authorised—

 
Grisou-
 naphtalite- 
couche.

Grisou-
 naphtalite- 
roche

Grisou-
 tetrylite- 
couche.
For mines
free from
 fire-damp, 
etc.
   N1a.  N4  .  N1b.   N1c.
Ammonium nitrate  95 90   91·5 86·5 88 87·4
Potassium nitrate  — 5   —  5   5
Dinitro-naphthane  — —   8·5 8·5 12·6
Trinitro-naphthalene   5   5   —  — 
Tetryl  — —   —  —  7

The Grisounites-couche are used in the coal seams as they have theoretical temperatures of explosion of 1500° or less, but N1a has been replaced to a considerable extent by N4, because the presence of a proportion of potassium nitrate is found to increase the safety; these are both coloured green. The Grisounites-roche have theoretical temperatures of explosion of 1900° or less, and are used in the rocks in coal mines. N1b is dyed rose colour, and N1c pale yellow.

Many explosives of this type are in use in different countries. On the old British Permitted List were Ammonite, Westfalite, Bellite and Roburite amongst others. Those now on the List contain ammonium or sodium chloride to enable them to pass the Rotherham Test, e.g. the later Ammonites, Bellite Nos. 2 and 4, Faversham Powder and Negro Powder.

On the Belgian list of Explosifs S.G.P. is Favier II bis—

Ammonium nitrate 77·6
Dinitro-naphthalene 2·4
Ammonium chloride 20
Charge limite    More than  293 grammes.

FAVORIT. See KORONIT.

*FELIXITE is a smokeless shot-gun powder introduced in 1906 by the New Explosives Company. It is a fibrous 42-grain bulk powder, and, according to an analysis published in “Arms and Explosives,” 1917, p. 76, has the composition—

Nitrocellulose, insoluble   40·5
”    soluble 20·5
Metallic nitrates 30·0
Nitro-compound 5·0
Vaseline 2·7
Moisture 1·3

*FILITE was a smokeless powder formerly used in the Italian services. It was a Ballistite consisting generally of equal parts of nitroglycerine and collodion cotton, to which 0·5 to 1 per cent. of aniline or diphenylamine was added as a stabiliser. It was gelatinised with a solvent and drawn out into cords.

FLAMMIVORE.—A Belgian coal-mine explosive made at Arendonck—

O. I.
Ammonium nitrate 70   Blasting gelatine 4
Barium nitrate 15   Ammonium nitrate 82
Cellulose 5   Potassium nitrate 10
Dinitro-toluene 10   Rye flour 4

Charge limite

100g.

  Charge limite

500g.

III.
Nitroglycerine 6
Ammonium nitrate 70
Ammonium sulphate 9
Barium sulphate 7
Dextrin 8

Charge limite

650g.

In the United Kingdom this is “authorised” but not “permitted” for use in dangerous mines.

FLOBERT ammunition consists of small cartridges, like detonators, charged with a small quantity of mercury fulminate, and some antimony sulphide and potassium chlorate. It is used for target practice and shooting small birds.

FOERDER SICHERHEITSSPRENGSTOFF.—A German coal-mine explosive containing ammonium nitrate, not more than 4 per cent. of blasting gelatine, mono- and di-nitro-aromatic compounds, vegetable meal and neutral salts.

FOERDIT.—A German coal-mine explosive containing nitroglycerine gelatinised or ungelatinised, carbohydrates, glycerine, nitro-compounds, inorganic nitrates and sodium or potassium chloride.

Ammon-Foerdit is a similar mixture, except that it contains a larger percentage of ammonium nitrate and no other inorganic nitrates. The nitroglycerine is gelatinised, and there is a little diphenylamine. The following are examples of these two explosives—

    Foerdit.   Ammon-Foerdit.
Nitroglycerine   25·5   3·8
Collodion cotton   1·5   0·2
Ammonium nitrate 37 85
Nitro-toluene 5
Dextrine or flour 4 4
Glycerine 3 2
Diphenylamine 1
Potassium chloride 24 4

Ammon-Foerdit F, which has been introduced recently, contains up to 10 per cent. of potassium perchlorate and is similar to Astralit V.

FORCITE.—A variety of gelatine dynamite or gelignite made in Belgium. It contains blasting gelatine 36 to 64 per cent., sodium or ammonium nitrate, wood meal, magnesia and sometimes bran.

An American explosive of the same name is a dynamite containing wood tar—

Nitroglycerine 49  
Collodion cotton   1  
Sodium nitrate 38  
Sulphur 1·5
Wood tar 10  
Wood pulp 0·5

FORCITE ANTIGRISOUTEUSE 3.—A Belgian coal-mine explosive of the Carbonite type—

Nitroglycerine 26  
Potassium nitrate 33  
Barium nitrate 1  
Rye flour 38·5
Bran 1  
Sodium carbonate 0·5

Charge limite

750g.

FORTEX.—A coal-mine explosive made by Explosives and Chemical Products, Ltd. The mixture, which was on the old Permitted List, was—

Ammonium nitrate   78·5
Tetryl 21·5

NEW FORTEX.—A modification of the above to pass the Rotherham Test—

Date of Permit 25-11-13
Ammonium nitrate 35  
Potassium nitrate 33  
Tetryl 12  
Ammonium chloride 20  

Limit charge

10 oz.
Power (swing of ballistic pendulum)  2·61”

FORT PITT MINE POWDER NO. 1 is an American coal-mine powder on the Permissible List. It is a nitroglycerine explosive.

FRACTORITE.—A Belgian coal-mine explosive—

B. D.
Ammonium nitrate 75   Ammonium nitrate   75
Dinitro-naphthalene 2·8   Sodium nitrate 10
Ammonium oxalate 2·2   Nitroglycerine 4
Ammonium chloride 20   Ammonium oxalate 7
      Flour 4

Charge limite

450 g.

  Charge limite

700 g.

FRACTURITE.—A coal-mine explosive formerly on the Permitted List, made by the British Explosives Syndicate, Ltd.—

Nitroglycerine 52·5
Collodion cotton 3·5
Potassium nitrate 23  
Wood meal 6  
Ammonium oxalate   15  

FUEL-ITE.—There is a series of coal-mine explosives of this name on the American Permissible List. Nos. 1 and 2 are nitroglycerine explosives of the Carbonite type. No. 3 is an ammonium nitrate explosive.

FUELLPULVER (or FP.) is the name given by the Germans to mixtures of trinitro-toluene and ammonium nitrate used for filling shell. Fp. 60/40, for instance, is a mixture of 60 parts trinitro-toluene and 40 parts of ammonium nitrate, and is consequently the same as Amatol 40/60. Fp. without figures stands for trinitro-toluene.

*FULMEN POWDER is a 33-grain smokeless powder for shot-guns made by the Schultze Gunpowder Co.

FULMENIT.—A blasting explosive made by the German Nobel Co., containing ammonium nitrate, vegetable meal or charcoal, paraffin oil, trinitro-toluene and guncotton.

WETTER-FULMENIT is a coal-mine explosive which has been much used. It differs from the above in containing also sodium or potassium chloride—

Fulmenit.   Wetter-Fulmenit.
Ammonium nitrate   86·5 76   76·5
Guncotton 4   0·5 4  
Trinitro-toluene 5·5 11·8 5·5
Charcoal 1·5 1·5 1·5
Paraffin oil 2·5 0·2 2·5
Sodium chloride —  10   10  

FUMYL.—A smoke-producing explosive containing trinitro-toluene and ammonium chloride, used for opening poison-gas shell, etc.

GATHURST POWDER.—An explosive of the Grisounite class. According to an analysis given in Cundill and Thomson’s Dictionary it consisted of—

Ammonium nitrate   83·4
Dinitro-benzene 16·5
Moisture 0·1

GEHLINGERIT.—A German blasting explosive. Gesteins-Gehlingerit III. contains—

Ammonium nitrate   80
Trinitro-toluene 15
Flour 5

Wetter-Gehlingerit, which is a coal-mine explosive, contains also sodium or potassium chloride, and may contain up to 4 per cent. of nitroglycerine to increase its sensitiveness.

GELATINÉ À L’AMMONIAQUE.—A Belgian explosive, a mixture of blasting gelatine and ammonium nitrate.

GELATINE DYNAMITE is a mixture of blasting gelatine, potassium nitrate and a little wood meal. That made in Britain must contain between 70 and 77 per cent. of nitroglycerine; it may contain up to 2 per cent. of calcium or magnesium carbonate, or 1/2 per cent. of mineral jelly as a stabiliser. The following may be taken as an example of its composition—

Nitroglycerine 74·5
Collodion cotton 5·5
Wood meal 4  
Potassium nitrate 15·5
Calcium carbonate   0·2
Moisture 0·3

In America brands are made of 35 to 80 per cent. strength.

GELIGNITE is similar to Gelatine Dynamite except that it contains a smaller proportion of blasting gelatine; in Britain the percentage of nitroglycerine must be between 56 and 63, e. g.

Nitroglycerine 61  
Collodion cotton 4·5
Wood meal 7  
Potassium nitrate 27  
Calcium carbonate   0·2
Moisture 0·3

There are also a number of modified Gelignites, which either contain sodium or barium nitrate in partial or entire replacement of the potassium nitrate, or else contain some substance to reduce the freezing point of the nitroglycerine and so diminish the danger of freezing, such as dinitro- or trinitro-toluene or dinitro-glycol.

GESILIT.—A German coal-mine explosive made by Nahnsen. It contains blasting gelatine, inorganic nitrates, sodium chloride, carbohydrates and dinitro-toluene—

  I. II. III.
Blasting gelatine   30·75   30·75   32·5
Ammonium nitrate   —   22   22  
Sodium nitrate 18   —   —  
Dinitro-toluene 5·25 5·25 5·25
Dextrin 39   21   —  
Pea flour —   —   20  
Sodium chloride 7   21   20·25

When tested in a gallery with an explosive gas mixture I. proved to be safer than the other two.

GIANT COAL-MINE POWDERS are American coal-mine explosives on the Permissible List. No. 5 is an ammonium nitrate explosive, whereas Nos. 6, 7 and 8 are low-grade dynamites mixed with hydrated salts.

GIANT POWDER is a name given in America to dynamite. No. 1 is a kieselguhr dynamite containing about 75 per cent. of nitroglycerine. Many varieties, however, do not contain kieselguhr, but consist of nitroglycerine mixed with wood pulp, sodium or potassium nitrate, resin, sulphur or other combustible matter. The nitroglycerine is sometimes gelatinised with collodion cotton, or in the “Extra” varieties is partially replaced by ammonium nitrate.

GLONOINE was an early name for nitroglycerine.

GLUECKAUF.—A German explosive of the Grisounite type consisting of ammonium nitrate and vegetable meal, to which might be added any of the following: sugar, resin, fatty oil, potassium nitrate, sodium nitrate, dinitro-benzene, ammonium oxalate, copper oxalate, copper nitrate ammonia, or sodium chloride. It was used for a time by several potash mines; was given up again by most of them.

GOOD LUCK was an explosive made by the Sprengstoffwerke Glueckauf A.-G., and was on the old British Permitted List for coal-mine explosives. It had the composition—

Ammonium nitrate   82·5
Dinitro-benzene 1  
Turmeric 10·5
Copper oxalate 6  

GRANATFUELLUNG (i. e. Shell-filling) is a name given by the Germans to certain high explosives used for filling shell. Granatfuellung C/88 is picric acid, and C/02 is trinitro-toluene. See Fuellpulver. Other substances used in German shell and bombs are trinitro-anisole, dinitro-benzene, hexanitro-diphenylamine and hexanitro-diphenyl sulphide, otherwise picryl sulphide.

GRISOUNITE.—A French coal-mine explosive. See FAVIER Explosives.

GRISOUTINE or GRISOU-DYNAMINE is the only explosive except Grisounite allowed in the more dangerous French coal mines. It consists of ammonium nitrate mixed with blasting gelatine. As the State monopoly does not extend to explosives containing nitroglycerine, it is made by private firms, but the compositions are regulated by the “Commission des Substances Explosives,” which in 1911 resolved that they should be uniformly as follows—

 
  Couche
  Couche au
Salpêtre. 

  Roche.
  Roche au
Salpêtre.
Nitroglycerine 12   12   29   29  
Collodion cotton 0·5 0·5 1   1  
Ammonium nitrate   87·5 82·5 70   65  
Potassium nitrate —   5   —   5  

The calculated temperatures of explosion of the Grisoutines couches are below 1500°, and those of the Grisoutines roches below 1900°. The addition of 5 per cent. of potassium nitrate is found to increase the safety.

There are a number of explosives of this type made in other countries also, but they usually contain small proportions of combustible substances such as wood meal, and nitro-bodies such as trinitro-toluene. Of British explosives of this type, mention may be made of Monobel, Super-Excellite and Monarkite. German explosives of this sort include Salit, Tremonit, Donarit, Ammon-Karbonit and Astralit.

On the Belgian list of Explosifs S.G.P. is Grisoutine II., which is identical in composition with Dynamite anti-grisouteuse V.

GRISOUTITE.—A Belgian coal-mine explosive—

Nitroglycerine 44
Magnesium sulphate 44
Cellulose 12

Charge limite

300 g.

GUARDIAN.—American coal-mine explosives. Nos. 2, 2X, 3 and 3X are ammonium nitrate explosives, whereas Guardian A and Guardian Coal Powder B are nitroglycerine explosives.

GUNCOTTON.—A highly nitrated cotton containing about 13 per cent. of nitrogen and only slightly soluble in ether-alcohol.

GUNPOWDER. See BLACK POWDER.

*HALAKITE attracted public attention out of all proportion to its merits, of which it possessed none, in consequence of the extravagant claims made on its behalf by its “inventors” and their dupes. Early in 1917 the British Government caused an inquiry to be held, and the case for the explosive collapsed in a ludicrous manner. According to patent specification, No. 685 of 1915, the basis of the explosive was an admixture of lead nitrate with glycerine and other substances, and under the working conditions the glycerine was said to react with the nitrate to form a nitro-compound, which, of course, is not true. The substance actually submitted to the British and French authorities consisted of cordite mixed with lead nitrate, barium nitrate and lead chromate. This was stated by the promoters to be equally effective as a high explosive and a propellant! See “Interim and Final Reports of the Army Council (Halakite) Inquiry,” Cd. 8446.

HALALIT.—A German blasting explosive made by Nahnsen, containing not more than 65 per cent. of potassium perchlorate, ammonium nitrate, and not more than 32 per cent. of nitrated toluene, of which not more than 20 per cent. must be trinitro-toluene. It may also contain collodion cotton to gelatinise the liquid nitro-toluene, and sodium nitrate and wood meal or other vegetable meal.

Ammon-Halalit A, which has been introduced recently, is similar to Astralit V.

HALOKLASTIT. See PETROKLASTIT.

HAMMONIT.—A German blasting explosive containing not more than 40 per cent. of potassium or sodium perchlorate, not more than 4 per cent. of nitroglycerine, aromatic nitro-bodies, ammonium nitrate, sodium or potassium nitrate, neutral salts and vegetable meal or other combustible matter.

HASSIA-CHLORAT is an explosive that was introduced in Germany during the War. It consists of 65 per cent. potassium chlorate and 35 per cent. combustible, and it is claimed that the large proportion of the latter not only makes it a mild explosive, but also renders it comparatively insensitive. It is also called Spreng-chlorat.

HAYLITE.—A coal-mine explosive made by the National Explosives Co. There were three varieties on the Permitted List: No. 1 was also on the old Permitted List, but has now been repealed.

  No. 1. No. 2. No. 3.
Date of Permit   1-9-13   21-11-16   30-5-18
Nitroglycerine 26 15·5 9·5
Collodion cotton 1 0·3
Ammonium nitrate 60·5
Potassium nitrate 20
Sodium nitrate 59·5
Barium nitrate 20
Trinitro-toluene 5
Mineral jelly 7
Wood meal 15 7·7 5·5
Sodium chloride 19·5
Ammonium oxalate 11 5  
Borax 12

Limit charge

10

18

16 oz.
Power (swing of ballistic pendulum)   2·18 1·96 2·44”

H.E. stands for High Explosive, used for charging shell or other military purpose.

*HEBLER POWDER was a so-called smokeless powder which was manufactured at one time in Switzerland. According to an analysis published by Cundill and Thomson, it was ordinary gunpowder in which about a fifth of the saltpetre had been replaced by ammonium nitrate. It did not appear to have a greater tendency to absorb moisture than ordinary powder. It was also called Wellite. See also Ammonpulver.

HECLA NO. 2 is an American coal-mine explosive on the Permissible List. It is an ammonium nitrate explosive made by the Du Pont Co.