More Ways to Blow Things Up
pitabutter writes "Since the /. crowd seems to appreciate the exciting combination of amateur chemistry and fearlessness (what is it about intelligence and the desire to blow things up?), Sam Barros' site would be worth a look. Rail guns, high voltage, electromagnetic experiements-all there and with videos to boot. Unable to confirm if Sam still has appendages intact........"
The site claims to be: "The number one Amateur Science page!" This is a bit depressing if true. I sure hope that amateur scientists are working more useful problems than blowing things up...
I can't help thinking about Vannevar Bush's article in the July 1945 Atlantic Monthly in which he surveyed the possible uses for organized technological development and concluded that "Memex" - the source of the hypertext idea, was the most important thing to work on. What would a similar analysis uncover as the most important problem for technology and "Amateur Scientists" today? I don't think it would have anything to do with blowing things up...
bob wyman
For my senior EE project, I built a railgun. Used aluminmum bar stock for the rails, milled out a channel for a ball bearing, injected the bearing with a paintball gun. The power supply was a bank of electrolytics in parallel totalling 48 mF at 600V, so around 9 kJ total.
Didn't look anywhere near so impressive as this guy's.
Is it just me, or does seeing this kind of site make anyone else remember and pine for the days of glubco? Where else could you read all about tesla coils, railguns, magnetrons and that oxygen death ray thing, as well as having some downright hilarious editorials?
Sadly, after quickly accumulating a cult following, the guys at Glubco, God bless them, developed somewhat of an ethical issue, and their weaponary division exists no longer. I wish the buletin board and editorials where still up, though. Ah, the nostalgia...
Seriously, security through ignorance is about as futile as security through obscurity. If High Schools want to water down their chemistry classes in a vain attempt to keep people from learning how to make bombs, I pity them. It's not going to stop a kid who wants to blow up the school from doing so, because the information is everywhere and the materials are common household products. They should just go ahead and teach the kids some cool chemistry with cool demonstrations like methane bubbles, nitrocellulose, thermite, Sugar+KNO3, Zinc+NH4NO3+NH4Cl+H20, etc., all of which I got to do in my AP chem class. :)
Plus you can save a lot of money on fireworks around the 4th by making your own ;). Go grab a 20-lb bag of ammonium nitrate, some zinc powder, and then some colorings:
NaCl (table salt) - orange KCl (salt substitute, road salt) - purple CaCl2 (road salt) - orange Copper - blue
plus paints are a good source of exotic transition metals, if you can figure out what exactly they contain.
Repeal the DMCA!
Last october finnish chemistry student build a bomb and took it to shopping mall. It went off in his back-bag, and he and six others were killed. This student was active member on discussion board about "home chemistry", where teens were exchanging information about explosives and other "cool" stuff. From remains of the bomb police found out that it probably contained a timer, and they believe student did't mean to kill himself. Did he mean to detonate it in mall, nobody knows.
So when carrying those home-made explosives and poisons around stay the hell away from other people, so they don't have to pay because you felt smart and immortal enough to build something cabable of killing instantly if you made even smallest mistake.
Couple links about this tragedy: Finnish police check DIY bomb website and how information about bomber was spread in internet.