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> Selfmade FAE Bombs, 2l Glass-Bottle + Gasoline + fizz from carbonated soda = Profit?
Stahlseele
post Jul 20 2010, 09:21 PM
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Is it that easy?
Probably not, anybody wanna talk about how to best go about this?
Preferably SR3 oriented, but not neccessarely limited to that edition.
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Yerameyahu
post Jul 20 2010, 09:25 PM
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Ha! Carbonated gasoline? (IMG:style_emoticons/default/smile.gif)

AFAIK, you just need to release a fuel vapor, then set off an ignitor charge; it's basically a gas leak at your house, on purpose. Obviously, the devil's in the details: ignition temperatures, air-fuel mixes, etc.
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Doc Chase
post Jul 20 2010, 09:26 PM
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QUOTE (Yerameyahu @ Jul 20 2010, 09:25 PM) *
Ha! Carbonated gasoline? (IMG:style_emoticons/default/smile.gif)

AFAIK, you just need to release a fuel vapor, then set off an ignitor charge; it's basically a gas leak at your house, on purpose.


Get enough flour into the air in an enclosed space and you've got the gas leak without the gas. (IMG:style_emoticons/default/biggrin.gif)
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Yerameyahu
post Jul 20 2010, 09:28 PM
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Right, and the CS/tear gas explosion at Waco was the same principle, except with the bonus product of cyanide, IIRC? Anyway, read the wikipedia page on FAE and stat up something *reasonable*.
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stevebugge
post Jul 20 2010, 09:30 PM
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Abandoned grain silos make great FAEs
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Yerameyahu
post Jul 20 2010, 09:31 PM
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I bet Stahlseele would prefer something more… portable. (IMG:style_emoticons/default/biggrin.gif)
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Stahlseele
post Jul 20 2010, 09:31 PM
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QUOTE (stevebugge @ Jul 20 2010, 11:30 PM) *
Abandoned grain silos make great FAEs

No, they make BIG FAE's . . slight but important difference there ^^
QUOTE (Yerameyahu @ Jul 20 2010, 11:31 PM) *
I bet Stahlseele would prefer something more… portable. (IMG:style_emoticons/default/biggrin.gif)

Preferably, but with Trolls, portable is a pretty wide area of description ^^
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Doc Chase
post Jul 20 2010, 09:33 PM
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Great and big are interchangeable.

But best when used in conjunction. Great Big FAE's are best.
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crash2029
post Jul 20 2010, 09:33 PM
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Personally I'd go for something like powdered magnesium or aluminum. If you're dead set on using petrochemicals I would go for something with more oomph that straight gasoline. Maybe high octane jet fuel or something.

By the way we are talking about thermobaric weapons, right?
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Doc Chase
post Jul 20 2010, 09:34 PM
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Yes, but if you're talking powdered magnesium/aluminum, you're talking a thermite bomb.
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Stahlseele
post Jul 20 2010, 09:36 PM
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QUOTE (crash2029 @ Jul 20 2010, 11:33 PM) *
Personally I'd go for something like powdered magnesium or aluminum. If you're dead set on using petrochemicals I would go for something with more oomph that straight gasoline. Maybe high octane jet fuel or something.

By the way we are talking about thermobaric weapons, right?

Well, basically i want something like the big brother of the old mollotow cocktail . .
throw one of the big bang ones, throw a mollotow cocktail, watch earth shattering KA-BOOM.
preferably from far enough away ^^
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stevebugge
post Jul 20 2010, 09:36 PM
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QUOTE (Yerameyahu @ Jul 20 2010, 02:31 PM) *
I bet Stahlseele would prefer something more… portable. (IMG:style_emoticons/default/biggrin.gif)


Then let's try one of the prepackaged Coleman LP Camp Stove fuel canisters, opened to a slow leak, inside a plastic cooler sealed with duct tape and some sort of remote detonating or timed detoanting device.
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Yerameyahu
post Jul 20 2010, 09:36 PM
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Yes, FAE = thermobaric. Honestly, you should be using a vapor, but a powder *is* possible. Less fun, though. (IMG:style_emoticons/default/frown.gif) It does have to be *fuel*, though. Elemental aluminum does not count, cheater.

That sounds reasonable. LP should be an acceptable fuel, easy to acquire, reasonably strong.
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Doc Chase
post Jul 20 2010, 09:38 PM
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QUOTE (stevebugge @ Jul 20 2010, 09:36 PM) *
Then let's try one of the prepackaged Coleman LP Camp Stove fuel canisters, opened to a slow leak, inside a plastic cooler sealed with duct tape and some sort of remote detonating or timed detoanting device.


The explosion isn't as much as you think it would be under those circumstances, although it would turn the cooler into shrapnel. I used to bullseye them with a 30/30 prepped like that.

Use something larger, like an actual 5gal propane tank and a high-velocity round.
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Stahlseele
post Jul 20 2010, 09:39 PM
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Well, that's pretty much hollywood there . . shooting these containers will make them explode because they rupture FROM THE PRESSURE . . but there will be no explosion of the gas inside . .
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stevebugge
post Jul 20 2010, 09:40 PM
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QUOTE (Doc Chase @ Jul 20 2010, 02:38 PM) *
The explosion isn't as much as you think it would be under those circumstances, although it would turn the cooler into shrapnel. I used to bullseye them with a 30/30 prepped like that.


I wouldn't expect this to be all that effective, but it would be a good noisy distraction for an investment of maybe 50 (IMG:style_emoticons/default/nuyen.gif)

All depends on the goal I suppose
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Yerameyahu
post Jul 20 2010, 09:40 PM
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Right, that's the *whole* point of dispersing a vapor and using an appropriate ignitor. A bullet to the can does neither. Didn't they do a Mythbusters of this?

You'd get your vapor-air mix, and you'd use something like a magnesium flare (same camping store, convenient!).
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Stahlseele
post Jul 20 2010, 09:42 PM
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Well . . with incendiary ammo or ex/exex ammo maybe . . perhaps even SnS if the load in there is big enough to spark . .
Mythbusters did one show once on someone having been sprayed with pepperspray wearing a certain kind of shirt and then when he got hit with a tazer the little lightning arcs from the needles made the shirt soaked in easyly flammable pepper spray spontanously combust . .
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Doc Chase
post Jul 20 2010, 09:42 PM
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QUOTE (Yerameyahu @ Jul 20 2010, 09:40 PM) *
Right, that's the *whole* point of dispersing a vapor and using an appropriate ignitor. A bullet to the can does neither. Didn't they do a Mythbusters of this?

You'd get your vapor-air mix, and you'd use something like a magnesium flare (same camping store, convenient!).


But it's so much fun!

And yes, they did. They were doing the Jaws myth. The damage it did to the shipping container...*cackle*

Get...three five gallon propane tanks. Open them all up in a small room, and set a tripwire to a safety flare.
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Badmoodguy88
post Jul 20 2010, 09:57 PM
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QUOTE
Elemental aluminum does not count, cheater.


"Thermite is a pyrotechnic composition of a metal powder and a metal oxide, which produces an aluminothermic reaction known as a thermite reaction. Most varieties are not explosive, but can create short bursts of extremely high temperatures focused on a very small area for a short period of time.

The aluminium reduces the oxide of another metal, most commonly iron oxide, because aluminium is highly reactive:

Fe2O3 + 2Al → 2Fe + Al2O3 + heat

The products are aluminium oxide, free elemental iron [2], and a large amount of heat. The reactants are commonly powdered and mixed with a binder to keep the material solid and prevent separation.

The reaction is used for thermite welding, often used to join rail tracks. Other metal oxides can be used, such as chromium oxide, to generate elemental metal. Copper thermite, using copper oxide, is used for creating electric joints in a process called cadwelding:

3CuO + 2Al → 3Cu + Al2O3 + Heat

Some thermite-like mixtures are used as pyrotechnic initiators such as fireworks."

"Nano-thermite or "super thermite" is classed as an explosive. A mixture of thermite and sulfur produces thermate which lowers the melting point of the iron it contacts when reacting by forming a eutectic system. This is useful in cutting through steel."

"Metals are capable of burning under the right conditions, similar to the combustion process of wood or gasoline. In fact, rust is the result of oxidation of steel or iron at very slow rates. A thermite reaction is a process in which the correct mixture of metallic fuels are combined and ignited. Ignition itself requires extremely high temperatures."

"Ignition of a thermite reaction normally requires only a simple child's sparkler or easily obtainable magnesium ribbon, but may require persistent efforts, as ignition can be unreliable and unpredictable. These temperatures cannot be reached with conventional black powder fuses, nitrocellulose rods, detonators, pyrotechnic initiators, or other common igniting substances. Even when the thermite is hot enough to glow bright red, it will not ignite as it must be at or near white-hot to initiate the reaction. It is possible to start the reaction using a propane torch if done correctly. The torch can preheat the entire pile of thermite which will make it explode instead of burning slowly when it finally reaches ignition temperature." Thank go I never actually tried to play with this stuff. Sounds like an easy way to get horribly maimed.

"Often, strips of magnesium metal are used as fuses. Because metals burn without releasing cooling gases, they can potentially burn at extremely high temperatures. Reactive metals such as magnesium can easily reach temperatures sufficiently high for thermite ignition. Magnesium ignition remains popular among amateur thermite users, mainly because it can be easily obtained."

"The reaction between potassium permanganate and glycerol or ethylene glycol is used as an alternative to the magnesium method. When these two substances mix, a spontaneous reaction will begin, slowly increasing the temperature of the mixture until flames are produced. The heat released by the oxidation of glycerine is sufficient to initiate a thermite reaction. However, this method can also be unreliable and the delay between mixing and ignition can vary greatly due to factors such as particle size and ambient temperature."

"Apart from magnesium ignition, some amateurs also choose to use sparklers to ignite the thermite mixture. These reach the necessary temperatures and provide enough time before the burning point reaches the sample. However, this can be a dangerous method, as the iron sparks, like the magnesium strips, burn at thousands of degrees and can ignite the thermite even though the sparkler itself is not in contact with it. This is especially dangerous with finely powdered thermite."

"Similarly, finely-powdered thermite can be ignited by a regular flint spark lighter, as the sparks are burning metal (in this case, the highly-reactive rare-earth metals lanthanum and cerium). Therefore it is unsafe to strike a lighter close to thermite."

"A stoichiometric mixture of finely powdered iron(III) oxide and aluminium may be ignited using ordinary red-tipped book matches by partially embedding one match head in the mixture, and igniting that match head with another match, preferably held with tongs in gloves to prevent flash burns."

I added all this extra stuff because I would hate someone to do something stupid and get hurt. All this is from Wikipedia.

"Thermite hand grenades and charges are typically used by armed forces in both an anti-materiel role and in the partial destruction of equipment, the latter being common when time is not available for safer or more thorough methods. Because standard iron-thermite is difficult to ignite, burns with practically no flame and has a small radius of action, standard thermite is rarely used on its own as an incendiary composition. It is more usually employed with other ingredients added to enhance its incendiary effects. Thermate-TH3 is a mixture of thermite and pyrotechnic additives which have been found to be superior to standard thermite for incendiary purposes. Its composition by weight is generally 68.7% thermite, 29.0% barium nitrate, 2.0% sulfur and 0.3% binder (such as PBAN). The addition of barium nitrate to thermite increases its thermal effect, produces a larger flame, and significantly reduces the ignition temperature. Although the primary purpose of Thermate-TH3 by the armed forces is as an incendiary anti-materiel weapon, it also has uses in welding metal components."

So basically Thermite is just used for destroying stuff. I guess a shadowrunner could park a truck full of it on a bridge and watch it melt through the bridge and keep on burning till it is trying to burn a hole through the river bed bellow.
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Stahlseele
post Jul 20 2010, 10:07 PM
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I knew most of this stuff allready.
I'm allways astonished again, what can be achieved with simple legal and easy to obtain stuff ^^
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stevebugge
post Jul 20 2010, 10:21 PM
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QUOTE (Stahlseele @ Jul 20 2010, 03:07 PM) *
I knew most of this stuff allready.
I'm allways astonished again, what can be achieved with simple legal and easy to obtain stuff ^^


Most of what is controlled is just more efficient or more refined versions of things that can be duplicated with time and effort. There are some things that cannot be duplicated obviously but there is a lot that is controlled simply to prevent things from being done on a large scale quickly.

Export Administration Regulations I have to use this link for work periodically, it's alternately dull or fascinating depending how much you care about export restrictions from the US, but it can be interesting because it gives an idea of what is restricted and why.
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Badmoodguy88
post Jul 20 2010, 10:25 PM
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thermite
I thought I got all the safety stuff posted but there is a whole section further down the page. The more you read about it the more you really don't want to mess with the stuff.

Also there is white phosphorus. Another simple chemical composition. But i doubt it is easy to make.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/White_phosphorus
It is also extremely poisonous. As little as 2mg can kill you by destroying your internal organs. Namely the hart and lungs. It can also cause "smoking stool syndrome". I kid you not.

But one interesting thing about is this.

"Weight-for-weight, phosphorus is the most effective smoke-screening agent known, for two reasons: first, it absorbs most of the screening mass from the surrounding atmosphere and secondly, the smoke particles are an aerosol, a mist of liquid droplets which are close to the ideal range of sizes for Mie scattering of visible light. This effect has been likened to three dimensional textured privacy glass—the smoke cloud does not simply obstruct an image, but thoroughly scrambles both visual and infrared radiation, interfering with infra-red optics and weapon-tracking systems, serving as a protection for military forces from guided weapons such as anti-tank missiles."

I could see a shadowrunner rigger loading some of this into a drone for when it does not plan on being around humans when firing. White phosphorus if properly stated would be probably to good. Smoke grenade, heat damage, and poison all in one.
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Doc Chase
post Jul 20 2010, 11:34 PM
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'Cept Willie Pete doesn't kill if you inhale a bit of it. You have to be sucking it in next to the source for it to get lethal.
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Yerameyahu
post Jul 21 2010, 01:30 AM
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My point was that thermite isn't fuel-air or thermobaric, or really a blasting agent like we're discussing. Not that it doesn't *exist*. (IMG:style_emoticons/default/biggrin.gif)
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