Posted on 05/02/2008 9:15:26 AM PDT by raccoonradio
You used to be able to mail order carbide cannons and the carbide to go with them from the back pages of comic books. Missing all or parts of fingers wasn’t all that uncommon, but the ususal cause was carelessness around tractor PTOs.
Yeah, you are.
Boys are inquisitive and love to experiment. Gave mine a chemistry set and they learned to blow things across the room and embed objects into a wall with it though I think some household cleaning supplies got added(at least that was my guess).
I am lucky that I got them raised with only 1 broken arm and 5 sets of stitches.
I heard tell of some folks that made their own ;-)
I wonder if the “caps” were the rolls of paper caps from a cap gun? Back in the 60’s when I was a kid we used to take a needle and stick it through the center of the little “dots” on a roll of caps. You stick it through one and then fold the strip like an accordian, sticking the needle through each cap successively. When you’ve done the entire roll you pull the needle out and what you have is a roll of caps where every single dot is touching each other and the gunpowder is mixed between them because of the needle-hole.
Then you find a way to bind it, such as with tape or something. Stick in a fuse and have fun. Did I mention we loved to blow stuff up when we were kids?
When I look back on some of the stuff I DID as a kid in the 60’s, it’s wonder I’m still alive. Used Cap gunpowder stuffed into bicycle spoke nuts and held over a candle till they popped. Came close to losing an eye...........
I have a 3' piece of 4" ID, 5" OD steel pipe, with a 2" solid steel plug machined for, and (carefully) welded into one end. I think it might also have a 1/8" hole drilled into the end with the plug in it, but I'd never think of making a cannon. ;-)
I used to put roll caps into a clear plastic pill bottle, cap it, and set them off with a magnifying glass in the sun.
I’ve heard some rumours about people with similar pipes making model rocket bazookas. Of course, I’d think someone doing that sort of thing would probably want to wear a motorcycle helmet with a full face shield and thick leather gloves, but of course, I’d have no way of knowing for sure.
For the ultimate fashion statement, I'd throw in a chrome leather apron.
Why did you demean the boy scouts? are you Queer?
Although those are still around (as far as I know), by the late '80s they had become obsolete to a new generation of plastic cups with a pretty nice charge in them. At Collector's Armory you can buy very realistic looking "blank firing" guns which are actually high tech cap guns. The caps are contained in brass cartridges that will actually activate the slide mechanism, eject the "cartridge" and reload, just like an actual semi-auto.
It’s sarcasm—I was wondering if he was going for his
Bomb Making Merit Badge :)
City I was born in...though I grew up in Nahant and now
live in Beverly
Swampscott’s famed residents/natives include
David Lee Roth
Lesley Stahl
Dick Jauron (Buff. Bills)
Barry Goudreau (Boston)
Johnny Pesky (not a native but lived there for years—
used to hang out at Bickford’s but left in disgust after
they banned smoking)
As a youngster I used a rock tumbler to wet-mix the ingredients for black powder. I even made my own charcoal from seasoned oak - now I know that willow would be better. The powder I made would make Goex proud. BTW, I used LONG fuses.
Genius like yours would have fit right in with my group of friends. We did everything we could think of to creatively blow stuff up. :) We were lucky kids to have a very large woods in our neighborhood. During my childhood there were always woods either behind our house or across the street. No kid should be without woods to play in.
Our pinnacle may have been the drilled out CO2 cartridge stuffed with match heads and placed in a steel pipe - which we called our bazooka! :) This was back in the day when CO2 cartridges were made of steel, and could (sometimes) withstand the pressure generated when the match heads explode.
Forty years later my friends and I still have all of our fingers. Amazing!
No just rahter gnorant. Kids have been making homemade fireworks for a long time. I seem to remember Mark Twain's description of a fourth of July being incomplete unless a screaming victim of trying to make a louder bang was hauled away bleeding.
If you liked that, you’d have loved the motorcycle carbeurator duct-taped to a leaf blower experiment.
Nope, you're just being the product of an inferior generation of humanity (no personal insult intended). You're probably completely unaware that people have legitimate reasons for making their own explosives. You probably never cleared tree stumps from a field. You probably don't know that the USDA used to actually give classes on how to use ammonium nitrate and diesel to make anfo for such purposes.
What this kid did was stupid (not the bomb making, but failing to follow safety procedures); and he'll have a reminder of it for the rest of his life. But to extend his irresponsibility to suggest that "everyone" who makes homemade bombs should suffer a similar fate would curse almost every decent farmer, engineer or scientist the United States produces to being a cripple.
In an ideal world, of course, the kid would have had adult supervision. But we've created a pitiful world where the children of milquetoast parents aren't even trusted with rimfire rifles, let alone "dangerous" knowledge like basic chemistry and physics.
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