I'm wondering if the faster burning Bullseye has nearly finshed expending its entire energy on pushing the bullet by the time the bullet has reached the muzzle while the other two are still burning after the bullet has exited the muzzle?
What brought this to mind is the comment from bystanders that with Bullseye there is not much of a muzzle flash while with the AA7 it is around three feet and with AA#9 it around 9ft ( eyeball estimates after sunset). If that's the case then the difference in felt recoil could be due to the "rocket engine" effect of the burning powder in a barrel the bullet has long departed.
If this is the case it would seem to me that it would just be "wasting fuel" to use a slow burning powder that continued to burn outside the barrel and after the bullet had exited the muzzle. Idealy I think one would choose a powder to suit barrel length such that the charge was completely burned up just as the bullet exited the muzzle.
Am I missing something here?
![confused5 :confused5](./images/smilies/confused5.gif)
Gerry