When BE-86 first appeared, Alliant promoted it as Power Pistol with a flash suppressant.
In other words, the powders are the same, except for the flash suppressant added to BE-86.
Sort of.
Not exactly.
Alliant didn't market BE-86 like this. They actually brought it to market ahead of schedule under pressure of the powder shortage with NO marketing and NO data. The idea that BE-86 was Power Pistol came from comments made by an Alliant rep named Paul, who responded several times in what became an extensive BE-86 thread at THR. This Alliant guy Paul said that BE-86 was of the "same magic formulation" of Bullseye and Power Pistol, that its flakes were very close in geometry to Power Pistol, and that they had added a flash suppressant. That's not the same as as it being Power Pistol plus flash suppressant, which was the internet hub-bub at the time.
To make sense of that "geometry" comment, as well as the "Bullseye AND Power Pistol" comparison, it helps to know something about burn rate. Powder companies will often using the same formula, the exact same chemical compound, for different powders, but control the burn rate of the powder with different sizes or shapes of the powder particles. Sometimes, coatings and additives will affect that burn rate, as well. Basically, given the same chemical compound, the lower the mass is per unit surface area, the faster the burn rate. Or more simply, the smaller the particle is, the faster it will burn up. So you could have a series of pistol powders that employ the exact same chemical compound, but by way of an incremental increase in the particle size, have a range in the series from very fast burn rates to very slow burn rates with, again, the exact same chemical compound. And then you could name them something like N310, N320, N330, N340, & N350.
Anyway... this is apparently what is going on with BE-86. It uses the same formula as Bullseye. Power Pistol also uses the same formula as Bullseye. According to Paul, BE-86 has been produced and used in factory ammunition for 30 years. When Power Pistol was an OEM powder, its internal name was BE-84. So it's not that BE-86 is based on Power Pistol. It means they were both created from Bullseye in close succession. I suspect that if BE-86 hadn't been rushed to market, it would have had a name other than its internal corporate name. The BE in BE-84 and BE-86 obviously means "BullsEye" as they are both based on the ancient Bullseye formula. So while it's more or less true to say that BE-86 is like Power Pistol, but with a slightly smaller flake size and with a flash suppressant added, it would also be more or less true to say that BE-86 is like Bullseye, but with a larger flake size and with a flash suppressant added.
I think the most accurate summary of what Alliant rep Paul said would be -- BE-86 is a Bullseye formula powder, as was Power Pistol, but close to the burn rate of Unique, and with a flash suppressant.
That Alliant rep Paul also revealed that BE-86 was the powder that Federal used in its .45 ACP 185gr JHP Gold Medal Match ammo, and Speer uses it in their .357 SIG Speer Gold Dot LE Duty ammo.
There will be a quiz tomorrow.