Posted on 09/18/2015 10:30:50 PM PDT by Ray76
All true.
But be thankful you were not Alfred Herrhausen. Nor were you one of the US servicemen killed by this type of bomb in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Oh, and by the way, timers have nothing to do with it. This type of bomb is very accurate. You don't use timers with it. You need to set it off exactly when the target is in the right spot. Timers are for movies and English teachers. Timers build drama, something English teachers think they know about.
The point is, the folks in Irving got played. They allowed themselves to be gulled into overreacting. Zero is the beneficiary.
Better call the cops! If that thing blows, there will be French fries everywhere!
Should I take my comments to a more tech-savvy forum, and leave the hyperventilation and mindless hysteria to you?
Thank you, and yes, I understand your sentiment. I also dislike CAIR and their friends.
((Clearly the teachers who blew the whistle on this kid had never seen a real bomb...and they still havent.))
And you have? Please explain how a person such as yourself happen to see the internals of a suitcase enclosed explosive devise. When you finish that please tell us all that would be needed to convert the teens device from a clock to an explosive device. My son in-law who has disabled and destroyed well over 100 IED’s in both Iraq and Afghanistan is awaiting your answer.
If it has a clock chip and alarm function, then that is the possible “detonator”. If the demonstrator alarm panel has remote RF capability, then the options increase a lot.
The presence of the transformer and power cord really means nothing — just convenience. Just go upstream past where the incoming AC gets rectified to DC and that’s where you put in the leads to a battery pack.
This isn’t STEM curiosity or innocence. It was planned for a campaign/lawsuit.
I believe I made it clear in a previous post that I had not. Why don’t you ask your son-in-law if he thinks that the thing the kid brought to school is an IED? Please post back with his answer.
I understand that. However, take a look at it: it’s the guts of a cheap digital clock, with no apparent modifications. It doesn’t even have the 9v backup battery connected; i.e., it can only operate when plugged into the wall.
There is nothing resembling a blasting cap or detonator, and nothing resembling an explosive. No stray wires leading anywhere suspicious. It looks like what it turned out to be: the guts of a digital clock stuck into a case.
(((The second one is not a functional bomb, at least from the angle shown. It may have explosive material, but I dont see any initiator or timer or or fusing, or electronics of any nature. There could be a piezoelectric trigger imbedded inside, but that would be fairly sophisticated technology.)))
And the small suitcase device could be used to set it off. That one looks to be an Iranian shape charged IED, small but nasty.
The point is the swap over to battery power is near trivial, and as I said most clock chips have alarm functions built in that could be used for most any kind of event trigger (buzzer, bell, etc. after proper conditioning).
When you’re learning or in training/practicing, you don’t do it with explosives installed.
There is just too much crap there for “just a clock.” For it to be “just a digital clock” it would have to be the technology like back when I was working on electronic equipment in the 70s.
Second Pic.....I’ll bet that particular EFP ingot was forged in Iran. :0)
Answer my question please.
I said the same, nasty little shaped charge explosive.
(((There is nothing resembling a blasting cap or detonator, and nothing resembling an explosive. No stray wires leading anywhere suspicious. It looks like what it turned out to be: the guts of a digital clock stuck into a case.)))
Well you got close to answering my question. So the only thing missing is the explosive and the detonator. Now which wire’s could be used to set off the detonator?
Gaffer, it IS a 1970s clock. It’s a late 1970s or early 1980s Micronta (Radio Shack) alarm clock!
I think the answer you want is that you’d use the leads to the piezo buzzer; however, I seriously doubt that you could drive it directly. If it were me, I would use them to switch a higher voltage to trigger the detonator.
Other reports said it was a Honeywell Alarm demonstrator kit.
election season sure does bring out the gutter religion defenders and concern trolls on FR. Eventually things return to normal and they disappear
The Honeywell alarm demonstrator thing is pictured in that stupid meme that is going around. I already pointed out earlier in the thread when someone posted that pic that it was not a suitcase bomb, it was a Honeywell sales demo.
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