This was a new one to me. I’ve torn down a lot of Auto 5’s and I’ve never seen powder like this in the trigger assembly. This picture was after wiping a bunch of it off. I haven’t taken the rest of the gun apart to see how dirty the rest of it is. Any thoughts on how this could happen?
That’s what I initially thought. But it doesn’t look like any powder that I’ve ever seen. Did you put a match to it? Could incomplete powder burn be the result of too light of a payload? The contents spilling out inside the gun as the bad shell was manually ejected. I don’t know but that’s my best guess! Glad the gun isn’t “making metal” as we say in aviation.
incomplete powder burn can be for many reasons, payload, not enough pressure or even wrong powder for the job. Some powder is just dirty. Go shoot some federal shells and then look down the barrel. You will see powder residue. Nothing wrong with it. It wipes right out, but never had it get into the trigger like that. If you had a poor choice of wad/hull you could get powder migration, but for that much to get into the trigger you would surely know.
I asked on SGW: https://www.shotgunworld.com/threads/belgian-date-code.564170/#post-4944401 Even Researcher isn’t sure.
Adding to Rangers comment imported powders when used in shells can do strange things like this in different Countries ,climates and temperatures depending on their original design and origin country.
No but my notes show those barrel markings — the address and the Made in Belgium moved to the right side in 1977.