I'm sure most of the folks here know "Old Scout" from the SASS Wire. this is a copy of a portion of a post he made some time ago:
Mr. Mike Farhinger
Goex, Inc.
Belin Plant, Moosic, PA
Muzzleloader Magazine
Editor
Rebel Publishing Co., Inc
Sir:
Static electricity is always a topic of conversation within the explosive industry. Black Powder is a low explosive as opposed to high explosive like TNT, but is nevertheless dangerous when mishandled or when proper safeguards are ignored. Believe me, safety is always on our minds.
I have read reports on several studies concerning the ability of static electricity to ignite Black Powder. Most were conducted for the military. Keep in mind, that materials behave differently under different conditions, e.g. enclosed vessels, open vessels, varying temperatures and humidity, etc., and that no experiment can test for every combination of variables. But all the studies came to the same basic conclusions within the realm of the conditions they did test for: static electricity can ignite Black Powder, but only at very high levels of electrostatic induction as measured in Joulesbetween 8 and 20 Joules generally. I dont want to get to technical, so the point is, normal human activity cannot generate this kind of charge.
We take some ordinary precautions at the plant. All of our equipment is grounded and the building is grounded. We also treat some of the plastic bags we use with anti-static compound, but thats about the extent of it.
The fact, is we have never had an incident in our plant related to static electricity in over 90 years of production.
The above is an excerpt from a longer document. Old Scout