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Posted

KClO4............................48

Sodium oxalate...........8

Red gum........................11

Parlon............................10

MgAl 63 mic. ...............11

Flake Titanium.............10

Dextrin...........................4

 

A nice bright white/yellowish star with a rich tail of white sparks.

 

Stars can be pumped or cut. I use a starplate. The Titanium can be altered to sponge or larger flakes to make comets. It might be interesting to try FeTi or a mix of different titaniums.

 

Prime with plain BP.

 

best regards, spitfire

  • 7 months later...
Posted

What's the use of parlon in a sodium star? Since it's not used as a binder, and doesn't contribute to the sodium color, wouldn't it be better to use lower cost red gum for all the organic fuel?

  • 2 weeks later...
Posted

What's the use of parlon in a sodium star? Since it's not used as a binder, and doesn't contribute to the sodium color, wouldn't it be better to use lower cost red gum for all the organic fuel?

I just took a yellow star comp. that had the burning and color properties i was looking for. Burning speed, temperature and color where my goals in making a great Ti streamer. There was no need for me to change the original composition. It worked the way i wanted.

I shot some 3'' shells with em this NYE, they where better than i expected! very dense streamer with a perfect speed and color.

Posted

Adding saran inplace of parlon would give better result

Posted

That might be worth a try, can you define the reason why?

Posted

Have you tried a similar amount of titanium in a charcoal or glitter star? If so how did it compare?

 

Seems like an expensive mix for a titanium streamer. Do you happen to have a video? Maybe it's different than what I imagine it would look like. Just wondering if it could be made cheaper and look about the same?

Posted

The questions you ask FlaMntBkr are the exact same questions i asked myself while searching for what i wanted! I tried many times to get this result from C based stars, but it just can't do the trick. I was looking for a really bright slightly off-white star that spreads a thick tail of bright Ti. Together with the right burning speed. This comp did it. When using C based comps i pretty much always ended up with stars that look more like kamuro or at the best poorly oxidised stars with a lot of dross. I do not share comps if i'm not confident about the result. There will be tons of different and cheaper ways of getting the same, i just didn't figured that out. I'm in a learning curve, as most of us i guess. This one gave me what i have been looking for. So i shared it.

 

No, i don't have a video and there never will be. Just a matter of precaution in a strange world we are living in today. I wish it was different.

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