Stars (Metallic - Parlon Bound)

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Overview

The following star formulas are for metallically fueled Parlon-bound stars. Parlon is the main binder (also acts as the chlorine donor) so a solvent that dissolves Parlon is needed (acetone or any other ketone). These stars have good overall performance and color. They have been tested successfully as 1/4" and 3/8" cut stars, performance of other sizes and production methods is currently unknown. They require a hot two-stage igniter prime to ignite consistently. An inner coat of Veline Superprime (found here - Star Primes) with an outer coat of Black Powder works well.

Forming (cut stars)

Mix the finely powdered chemicals required thoroughly (see warning in notes below first), they may be pressed through a screen (100 mesh or similar) to ensure there are no lumps. Spray the mixture with acetone, or your solvent of choice, while mixing until you achieve a consistency similar to firm toothpaste (Warning - be aware of proper safety procedures while working with Acetone, acetone will dissolve some plastics so be aware of what types of containers and mixing intruments are being used). Roll the dough into a sheet of desired thickness and continue to cut the sheet into stars of desired size as you would for cutting stars of other compositions. The dissolved Parlon makes the paste slightly stringy when the mass is pulled apart, other methods of forming stars may be affected by this property and not work (such as rolling stars).


Notes:

Compositions

Table 1: Color compositions (in percentages) :

Red Yellow Blue Green White Tangerine(Reddish-orange) Indigo(Bluish-purple) Fuchsia(Reddish-purple)
Potassium perchlorate 30 30 62.5 30 40 30 62.5 63
Magnalium (-320 mesh) 30 30 30 40 30
Parlon 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15.1
Red gum 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5
Strontium carbonate 20 5 6.25 3.1
Barium carbonate 15 20
Calcium carbonate 20
Copper carbonate 12.5 6.25 8.8
Lactose 5 5 5


Notes:


Pros and Cons

Pros:


Cons:



References

These are star compositions developed by Ned Gorski.