Most details are already mentioned in my first post.
I don't know exactly what grain size the iron powder was, but it was impossible to see individual grains of iron, it was really like a dust. I weighed one gram of it, rinsed the plastic weighing cup with concentrated nitric acid to get all the iron in the beaker. Then the beaker was filled to about 15 mL with the same 65% nitric acid. I also added about 10 mL of distilled water, I am not exactly sure why.
In the next 20 minutes, I stirred the liquid occasionally by turning the beaker. Then I put the beaker in a stirring plate with heater. Underneath the heating plates is a rotating bar with two magnets glued on top of it, which spins when you turn the stirrer on. Within a second after I put the beaker onto that plate, the reaction occured, producing a cloud of NO2 that filled about half of the fume hood. The mixture was too hot to touch, but I did remove the beaker from the plate, in a reflex. After the reaction, the mixture was of a dark reddish brown colour, with black specks of iron still present.
The second time, I had only around 0.25 gram of iron left, which was put in 10 mL nitric acid. But this time, nothing happened whatsoever. I stirred it, put it on the stirring plate, held a neodymium magnet under it, waited 15 minutes and tried everything once more.
Maybe the different amount of iron in the second try was fatal, maybe it was just a lucky coincidence the first time. Although I am not really a fan of lucky coincidences in chemistry...