This Is What a Real Bomb Looks Like 361
szczys writes: You see them all the time in movies and TV shows, but is that what an actual bomb looks like? Probably not... here's what a real bomb looks like. This story stems from a millionaire gone bust from gambling addiction who decided to extort riches back from the casino. He built a bomb and got it into the building, then ransomed the organization for $3 million. The FBI documented the mechanisms in great detail — including the 8 independent trigger systems that made it impossible for them to disarm the thing. The design was so nefarious it's still used today as a training tool.
Looks like... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Looks like... (Score:5, Funny)
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They Never thought he had a bomb... (Score:4, Insightful)
Read this somewhere, humor with a hint of truth (and I paraphrase):
Girl: They thought he had a bomb
Guy: No they didn't think he had a bomb
Girl: Yes they did
Guy:
They didn't evacuate the school like you would if he had a bomb.
They didn't call bomb squad like you would if he had a bomb.
They took pictures of the contraption which you wouldn't have time for if it was a bomb.
They put the contraption in a cop car which you wouldn't do if he had a bomb.
They didn't think it was a bomb.
Re:They Never thought he had a bomb... (Score:5, Insightful)
They never claimed it was a bomb. They claimed it was a bomb hoax.
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They claimed it was a "bomb hoax" four hoursafter they arrested the kid and had examined the clock to discern it's arcane meaning.
They claimed it was a bomb hoax to try to cover their stupid cracker asses.
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Re: They Never thought he had a bomb... (Score:5, Funny)
Maybe the clock was the source of the alarm... ;)
Re:They Never thought he had a bomb... (Score:5, Insightful)
So if this was because he was muslim then surely the dozens to hundreds of other kids arrested and expelled for things even more asinine, like chewing a poptart into the wrong shape, must have been because of their race too... right? I mean surely you aren't holding a double standard here only for your precious designated victim class...
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Re:They Never thought he had a bomb... (Score:4, Informative)
They claimed it was a bomb hoax to try to cover their stupid cracker asses.
What a stupid cracker may look like [s-nbcnews.com].
By all means though, this story doesn't have nearly enough racism. Please continue to add more.
Re:They Never thought he had a bomb... (Score:4, Informative)
I guarantee that whoever that cop in the picture is, he wasn't the one deciding what kind of charges were to be brought against Ahmed.
Here is a picture of the police chief of Irving, Texas:
http://cdn5.img.sputniknews.co... [sputniknews.com]
And here's a picture of him standing with his posse:
http://www.gannett-cdn.com/-mm... [gannett-cdn.com]
[note: Take a look at the faces in that photo. Now remember that Irving, Texas is 60% minority. Get the picture?]
Here is a picture of the mayor of Irving, Texas, who has been giving speeches about how Muslims are gonna take over the US legal system:
http://cdn3.freedomoutpost.com... [freedomoutpost.com]
Yes, I stand by "stupid cracker". If you have a more apt term, I'm keen to hear it.
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Yes, I stand by "stupid cracker". If you have a more apt term, I'm keen to hear it.
How about literally any other term that doesn't make it sound like the race of the person is the real problem? Their racism might be the problem, but their race is not the problem. Maybe "racist" might be a better term than a racist term.
Am I seriously explaining this?
They claimed it was a bomb hoax to try to cover their racist asses.
Look at that, now it's a statement that you don't have to be racist to agree with.
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All teenagers have the capacity to be attention-whores, and it's worse when they're in an artificial environment that forces a whole bunch of people to interact with each other that would not have chosen to be around each other.
Odd you mention that. The same people who are all up in arms calling him an attention whore, are probably applauding the media whoring of that woman in Kentucky who won't sign gay marriage certificates, and now has been caught altering them - a definite crime.
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Salim Abu Aziz: Do you know what this is?
Harry: I know what this is...
[Salim smiles]
Harry: This is an espresso machine.
[Salim frowns]
Harry: No, no wait. It's a snow cone maker.
[Salim approaches Harry]
Harry: Is it a water heater?
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Try this experiment.
1. Replicate his "clock", wires , straps and all.
2. Stuff it in a backpack.
3. Try to take it through the White House security check point. or maybe just your local Federal Court building check point.
Let us know who that turns out for you.
Silly story... (Score:5, Insightful)
Real bombs can look like anything. The ones that get the military right now look like anything from dolls to bits of debris by the side of the road. Telling people what bombs really look like is misleading. The limitations governing shape and size come primarily from the intended use: if you want to kill a few soldiers by tricking them, then you disguise the bomb to look like something innocent, hiding the trigger and explosives from view. If you want to blow up a big building at a certain time or on a certain command, then you're limited by the amount of explosive and whatever sort of elaborate trigger mechanism you want to ensure it doesn't get disarmed, can be safely transported to its deployment area, and can be activated by your favorite method. If you want to drop one from a plane, launch one from a missile, or drop one on a sub, you additionally have other problems...
Re:Silly story... (Score:5, Interesting)
I used to be a security officer and I had training on IED identification.
You're completely correct. And that's assuming you can see the thing in the first place. Sometimes the IED winds up under something. I heard of one case where a guy lost his leg kicking an IED that was hidden under a fried chicken bucket.
The only thing you can do is to look for something that has what appears to be the requisite components to be an explosive device.
What people don't realize is that the easy part is making a device that will explode, the hard thing is making it explode when you want it to.
Re:Silly story... (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm not certain, but I'm pretty sure one of the "requisite components" of an explosive device is some fucking explosives.'
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Another one which was in the news was a tennis ball parked against a tire of a parked car. The owner saw the ball under the tire and kicked it out, only to have it explode.
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I was thinking more my romantic youth visions of a Roadrunner Wile E. Coyote bomb. It looks like a black bowling ball, with a big fuse sticking out of the top. On the side, in big white capital letters is written: "ACME BOMB".
As for the Klock Kid, he should have taken a cue from a Magritte painting, and written "Ceci n'est pas une bombe" on his clock. At least the French teacher in the high school might have been able to have figure out that is wasn't a bomb.
Maybe.
Re:Silly story... (Score:4, Funny)
It was Irving goddamn Texas for chrissake. You think they have a French teacher?
The closest thing they have to foreign language studies is sophomore Biology.
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The ones that get the military right now look like anything from dolls to bits of debris by the side of the road.
Ironically, they learned that lesson from previous wars when hidden and disguised mines were intended to rip of kids (and civilians in gerenal) arms and legs.
Have a look here at which countries banned the use of anti-personal explosive devices: http://www.icbl.org/en-gb/the-... [icbl.org]
Re:Silly story... (Score:5, Insightful)
You have specific evidence that he was singled out because of his race? Or is that your own bias showing?
If so, why then so much less outrage & support for the kid who pointed a chicken finger at another student [www.cbc.ca], or the pop-tart gun kid [huffingtonpost.com], or the kid who wrote a story about shooting a dinosaur [examiner.com]? I don't think any of them got invited to the White House.
Re: Silly story... (Score:2, Interesting)
And thousands of Black men were lynched, but only one resulted in a Supreme Court trial.
You want a world of equal results? Good luck.
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And lynching tends to be bad... are you suggesting otherwise?
Of course not, I'm not a progressive.
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Couple of reasons why this kid may have been invited, and the others not:
The first two examples you cite were both just doing something simple, involving pretend guns. Of course their punishments were stupid, but you also don't want to hold them up as examples of how you should behave. The dinosaur story writer was arrested which is worse, but it seems that the arrest was for becoming irate at the cops who were searching his locker.
The kid with the clock had built something which required some skill, and ST
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I won't say for a second that authorities didn't overreact in each of those cases - there's an obvious lack of intelligence/discretion on the part of the schools/authorities. It's fantastically beyond how any reasonable person should have responded. That being said, in all those cases, the kids in trouble were imagining / play acting a fictional situation that, if true, would have been cause for alarm. Also, none of the kids demonstrated any level of ingenuity - they were just kids being kids.
In this cur
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You have specific evidence that he was singled out because of his race?
My anecdotal evidence is that I did pretty much the same thing at the same age and nobody ever accused me of doing anything wrong.
I bought a clock kit from an ad in the back of popular electronics and put it in a radio shack case. I duct-taped the battery to the bottom. If anything my clock looked a lot more like a bomb than his did.
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Was that because of your race... or the time you did it?
I suspect you are a bit older than he so come from a different time, as do I.
There was a time when carry on baggage was not screened for weapons or explosives prior to a flight.
There was a time it was not uncommon for rural high school students to keep a shotgun or rifle in their vehicle in the fall so that they could go for a quick hunt after school.
There was a time you could walk without a ticket up to the gate at an airport and meet your loved ones
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There was a time you could walk without a ticket up to the gate at an airport and meet your loved ones when they arrived.
Are you saying that this is some sort of terrible hardship? Your loved ones have travelled thousands of miles to see you, whats a few more feet? I'm actually happier with no salesmen and no hari krishnas in the waiting room.
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You have specific evidence that he was singled out because of his race? Or is that your own bias showing?
Everyone is biased. So I am biased into thinking other people are biased, and that's probably a good thing.
You can call it bias, or just intuition. I think pretty much everyone had the same intuition that these teachers factored in Ahmed's race/religion/name/etc into their internal calculation of whether what he had was a bomb.
The courts can weigh the evidence. I think people are totally justified in having their own intuition and expressing their beliefs until the evidence is properly weighed.
If so, why then so much less outrage & support for the kid who pointed a chicken finger at another student [www.cbc.ca], or the pop-tart gun kid [huffingtonpost.com], or the kid who wrote a story about shooting a dinosaur [examiner.com]? I don't think any of them got invited to the White House.
Those are
Re:Silly story... (Score:4, Informative)
The kid's circuit had no explosive and was plain to see it wasn't a bomb as a result.
What, specifically, does "explosive" look like? Or more important, what would you LIKE it to look like?
I mean, with C4 (looks like putty) you can mold it to have any shape you want and then paint it, or stuff it into a container. You can make it into a pencil box and then paint over it with a stiff epoxy paint to make it hold its shape.
Or nitroglycerine. It's a liquid. Looks like water. Put it in a water bottle. Put a little caramel coloring in it and put it in a Coke bottle. Dye it green and it's Mountain Dew!
Tannerite looks like a grey powder. I'm guessing you could put a little resin in with it and press it into any shape you want to, and paint it so it's not gray.
Nitrocellulose looks like, well, cellulose but it has a bunch of nitrate groups bonded to it. I had a few bottles of it when I was young, it looked just like shredded coconut. But I could dissolve it and turn it into something that looked like paper. Nitrostarches look like flour. "That's not a bomb, it's a bag of flour."
This Hackaday article is stupid. It is showing us what one particular bomb looked like. It can't show us what every bomb looks like, because there is no defining visible property that you can say "that's what a bomb looks like". Even this "plain to see" it has no explosive statement is just ridiculous.
Do you know what a Campbell's Soup Can looks like? Doesn't look like a bomb, does it? Well, slip a hand grenade with the pin pulled in one and it makes a dandy bomb. Kick the can, the grenade pops out, the handle flies off, and in a few seconds, boom! Is that an electrolytic capacitor there on that circuit board, or is it a small amount of explosive in a metal can? (Or is it both!)
How about a soda straw? No explosive there, right? Plain to see. Well, when I was TEN I was making time delay fuses out of soda straws and nitrocellulose. Absolutely trivial. You couldn't tell by looking it wasn't just a soda straw anymore.
Everyone treated the thing as "not a bomb" but treated the kid like a terrorist anyway.
Being a terrorist doesn't require actually having a bomb, all it takes is pretending. That's why bomb HOAXES are illegal, too.
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That's why bomb HOAXES are illegal, too.
it's not a "hoax bomb" unless you tell people that it's a real bomb
he never said it was a bomb
the cops never actually thought it was a bomb. the "bomb hoax" thing is pure butt coverage
Re:Silly story... (Score:5, Insightful)
Sorry you're wrong. Leaving a suspicious looking object unattended is a completely different situation from carrying something around in your bag and telling people it's a clock when asked.
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Being a terrorist doesn't require actually having a bomb, all it takes is pretending. That's why bomb HOAXES are illegal, too.
Agreed.
But wouldn't that some... well... pretending?
But it's a good point. Killing people is not a goal of terrorists. Spreading terror is. (Hence the name.) Killing people is just one way to do that. Having everyone going through X-Rays and security checkpoints daily to remind them that they should be scared of terrorists is just another way.
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I agree with you, you can disguise a bomb to look like damn near anything.
Which leads to the next question; if you can disguise a bomb to look like anything, why aren't kids getting arrested/suspended left and right for taking hoax bombs into school?
If a Campbell's soup can is such a great way to disguise a bomb, why is it that kids bring them to school, in their lunches or repurposed for pencil holders, or for food drives? Why are these kids not being arrested for carrying hoax bombs?
-Rick
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It looks like a lump of "something"
Unless you make it to not look like a lump. That's the point. You can't tell just by looking.
It can be anything, but what it absolutely needs is physical mass.
Doesn't have to be much. A 22 round going off in your pocket is going to cause damage to you. A bit of explosive the size of a 45 will do a good job of dispersing a biological agent in a room, and the fleeing people will do a good job of dispersing it further.
The claim that you can see it isn't a bomb because you can see it doesn't have any explosive is just silly.
More like....this (Score:2)
https://embed.gyazo.com/30f5f0... [gyazo.com]
http://www.trackingterrorism.o... [trackingterrorism.org]
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Compare to this:
https://video-dfw1-1.xx.fbcdn.... [fbcdn.net]
Re:More like....this (Score:5, Funny)
No, more like:
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wi... [wikimedia.org]
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I see what you did there.
Not a real story (Score:5, Insightful)
The PD didn't even think it looked like a bomb, that's why the school wasn't evacuated.
Yes, it's a neat story, but no there was zero reason to tie this into recent events.
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Re:Not a real story (Score:4, Insightful)
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So, you're cool with someone deliberately putting a fake bomb on a bench in a shopping mall, no legal consequences?
Depends on who decided it was a bomb and who decided it was a fake bomb.
If I'm a jerk who makes a "fake bomb" (i.e., something that might look like a bomb to an uninformed person) for the express purpose of making people think it was a bomb, yeah, I certainly deserve the legal consequences of my act. However, if I happen to leave my backpack sitting under the bench and someone sees it and thinks it might be a bomb and calls the bomb squad and they examine it, discover it's not a bomb, and find my address i
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buying the materials to build anything significant will be detected and stopped.
did you bother to RTFA? The bomber stole the explosives from construction sites. If you only steal a little at a time they won't even notice that some are missing.
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buying the materials to build anything significant will be detected and stopped.
i forgot to mention, the marathon bombers bought fireworks in new hampshire, nobody had any clue.
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The law says hoax bombs are illegal, and the police have to treat them as illegal
What exactly is the definition of "hoax bomb"?
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Sec. 46.08. HOAX BOMBS.
(a) A person commits an offense if the person knowingly manufactures, sells, purchases, transports, or possesses a hoax bomb with intent to use the hoax bomb to:
(1) make another believe that the hoax bomb is an explosive or incendiary device; or
(2) cause alarm or reaction of any type by an official of a public safety agency or volunteer agency organized to deal with emergencies.
---
This case doesn't pass muster because there was no intent to pass this off as a bomb. The moment he said,
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"hoax bomb" is usually something that is either made to trick people into thinking something is a bomb or a "bomb hoax" is some person claiming to have a bomb.
Recent "Prank" Bombs (Score:2)
The Stupid Prank Du Jour these days is often a pressure cooker inside a backpack left some place.
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So it's my fault and I should go to jail if some idiot mistakes my spiffy new electronic toy for a bomb?
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Well, no one ever claimed to have a bomb nor made a cartoony-bomb-looking device. Typically, a "bomb hoax" does not include someone trying to explain that this is not a bomb.
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"The PD didn't even think it looked like a bomb"
Worst hoax ever.
How to handle (Score:5, Interesting)
The only thing I can really think of would to try to build some kind of reinforced blast cage around it in order to minimize the amount of damage it can do or perhaps try to direct the explosion to minimize hard, much like a gun directs the force of a blast out of the barrel.
Also, would scanning it even be safe as what's to stop someone from building some kind of trigger that would respond to x-ray exposure? Even if there weren't such a trigger, could anyone even call that bluff?
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there was a toilet float attached to a switch to prevent a fluid fill, plus the foil, plus vibration switches, plus boobytrapped screws, plus decoy switches, plus shape charge defeating explosives in the detonator housing. McGuyver couldn't have stopped this one from happening.
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> The linked article indicates that attempts to *diffuse* the bomb failed and it left a five-story crater in the building where it was located, which is probably less than ideal.
They diffused the bomb real good, and diffused half the Casino as well
The *defusing* part didn't go too well, though.
http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/diffuse
Re:How to handle (Score:4, Insightful)
no deaths, no injuries, and one less casino. Sounds like a good deal to me.
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X-ray triggers are exotic parts even today, and very hard to get in 1980. A bomber would have to go to some lengths to get hold of one, and it might be possible to track the purchase afterwards.
I can think of two possible ways to disarm it: The way they tried, or the liquid nitrogen mentioned below. TNT gets less sensitive when cooled - if you get it down to well below zero, it should inactivate or at least have a greatly reduced yield. At which point you use your low-tech rope set it off - hopefully result
Re:How to handle (Score:5, Informative)
X-ray triggers are exotic parts even today, and very hard to get in 1980. A bomber would have to go to some lengths to get hold of one, and it might be possible to track the purchase afterwards.
Just a footnote to what you said: Any semiconductor diode will detect X-rays, and bigger devices will have a larger capture aperture than smaller ones.
Just sawing the cap off of a transistor will work as a detector. A 2n2222 in metal case has a tiny aperture, but a 2N3055 power transistor has an aperture of about a square CM. I've personally used both as detectors.
As many people have found out, CCD camera arrays are sensitive to X-rays and can be used as detectors. The areas aren't much bigger than a power transistor, but the interface is usually trivial - just process the image and look for bright specs.
I don't disagree with your post at all. Making an X-ray detector would be a separate project and require some electronics expertise, and it seems that people who make bombs are largely ones who don't otherwise have marketable skills.
But if a STEM-educated bomber were to suddenly appear, it's not unreasonable for them to include an X-ray detector.
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Depends on if the battery was in the bottom or top box,
If the battery is submerged first there would be no power to detonate anything.
My question is would the ln2 cause enough of a pressure change to trigger the atmospheric pressure switch?
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They didn't go into full detail but a robust design would be to use two batteries, one in each box. Trigger the explosion if either battery is disconnected.
How do you cut a hole in the box to pour it in?
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Nope since they couldn't get it into the device you wouldn't have to worry about it setting off the float trigger.
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Since this is something that seems like it would be difficult to defuse or even work on, what would be the best way to handle the situation where it's found in a location like this? The linked article indicates that attempts to diffuse the bomb failed and it left a five-story crater in the building where it was located, which is probably less than ideal.
Step one: Protect people. Evacuate the entire blast radius. This was done.
Step two: Protect property. If the bomb can be moved, move it to a remote area and detonate it. A bomb is not 100% inert until it has exploded, because until then it has chemical potential energy. This was not possible.
If the bomb cannot be safely moved, attempt to render it safe to move. This was not possible.
If the bomb cannot be rendered safe to move, attempt to disrupt its mechanism. They attempted to do so with an explosive charg
Direct yes, contain no. Containment causes explosi (Score:5, Insightful)
> The only thing I can really think of would to try to build some kind of reinforced blast cage around it in order to minimize the amount of damage it can do or perhaps try to direct the explosion to minimize hard, much like a gun directs the force of a blast out of the barrel.
Directing the blast is certainly a reasonable approach. You can't really contain it. The container has to be maybe 1,000 times as big as the bomb, and very strong. So not feasible in most cases.
A great many explosives only explode BECAUSE they are confined. If you light a pile of gun powder in the open, you get fire. If you light the same quantity of gun powder inside of a container such as a cannon ball or gun, you get an explosion. The explosion occurs when the pressure gets high enough to burst open the containment.
Other explosives can self-confine - provided there is a significant quantity, the part in the middle is contained by the explosive around it, and that can start a chain reaction of pressure.
All that to say - if it were near an outside wall, assembling a vault around it to direct the energy through that wall would be the way to go. Maybe go ahead and cut a hole in the wall too.
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On my end i was thinking about something that would eat through the metal, thermite maybe, although i think its ignition is kinda hard?
liquid metal would complete the circuit and set off the explosive
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That's what one bomb looks like... (Score:4, Insightful)
If it weren't for the recent unpleasantness in Texas this article wouldn't have appeared here. I in no way condone this kid being hauled off to prison without more cause but let's not act like "that's not a bomb, this is a bomb" about it. These devices take all kinds of shapes, sizes and formats. Let's not let one example dismantle an entire range of possibilities. It's an unfortunate trait anymore, this idea that if our ideal vision of something doesn't fit the reality of it all then it's not worth considering the possibilities. This is why we get into endless (read: pointless) shouting matches about education, politics and many social constructs.
We're not going to rise from the quagmire we're in by thinking this way.
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If it weren't for the recent unpleasantness in Texas this article wouldn't have appeared here.
maybe you missed the title "This is what a Real bomb looks like"
no duh, of course it's timed. the idea was to shut down the people who say "it looked like a bomb"
introducing actual relevant facts into a discussion is perfectly appropriate
Ah, yes.. (Score:3, Funny)
Sweet! (Score:5, Informative)
Confidence in your design (Score:4, Interesting)
When I'm working around live wires I will frequently test the circuit, trip the breaker and then re-test the circuit just to be sure. And even after all that I still will occasionally brush wires to frame to make sure I haven't over looked something. I'll readily admit to a bit of irrationality where all that is concerned.
That said I can't imagine buttoning up all that Rube Goldberg contraption, transporting and then setting it to armed without a lot of trepidation that it would just go boom. Maybe the tilt mechanism got stuck in the contact position, maybe there was a short somewhere, maybe maybe maybe.
I'm really curious what his heart rate was the second he threw the switch. Did he have 100% confidence in the design or did he flinch.
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Indicator (Score:2)
That said I can't imagine buttoning up all that Rube Goldberg contraption, transporting and then setting it to armed without a lot of trepidation that it would just go boom. Maybe the tilt mechanism got stuck in the contact position, maybe there was a short somewhere, maybe maybe maybe.
I'm really curious what his heart rate was the second he threw the switch. Did he have 100% confidence in the design or did he flinch.
How about an indicator LED (or light, in his bomb) that lights up when anything is triggered?
Then you can transport the bomb and look at the light. If it's lit, you know that arming would result in an immediate explosion.
(I always tap a finger against the wire before grabbing it, and from operating X-ray machines in college I got into the habit of tapping *any* metal enclosure before operating a switch or control. Saved my life once when I did this to a refrigerator door handle by reflex and got a shock bef
How did he put it together? (Score:2)
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Re:Impossible to disarm? (Score:5, Informative)
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Re:Impossible to disarm? (Score:5, Interesting)
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The only option was the cut open the case and the wires simultaneously.
There's never a Jedi Knight with a light saber around when you need one.
Re:Impossible to disarm? (Score:5, Informative)
Couldn't they use a drill made of non-conductive material to drill into the case?
you didn't RTFA closely enough, the agents considered this but chips from the drilling process would have completed the circuit regardless of the drill's conductiveness.
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The shock alone would likely still detonate the dynamite.
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That's a spoon.
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The bomber was not interested in killing people, he wanted to destroy the casino. A grenade is not going to cause serious physical damage to the casino.
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That's the point: there's all kinds of bombs for all kinds of purposes, and very few of them look like this one, and none of them look like movie bombs.
This is a pretty cool bomb though, if you like bombs. Which you shouldn't.
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Good engineering is always interesting. The same technology could be used to create a server system that self-destructs if you try to open it.
Bombs or cows? (Score:2)
You are all Bombs. Bombs do BOOOOOOOM! BOOOOOOOOM bombs BOOOOOOOOOOM! bommmmmmmm make the bombs. YOU EXPLODING BOMBS!!!
And here I thought we were all cows?
There's been one of these in just about every post for a long time now.
Does anyone know what this noise is?
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A) No you're not going to get investigated for talking about it here.
B) The reason the crazies haven't done it yet is that the crazies, or at least the hyper extreme crazies are largely a figment of the media and congress critters mind. If you're not scared your not voting and watching the small amount of news they interlace between Viagra(TM) commercials.
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you're ... sigh.
Re:What everyone is missing... (Score:4, Funny)
What about Ted Stravinsky, the tunabomber?
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so in other words every object is a "hoax bomb" and we should immediately arrest anyone who is carrying anything.
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But have it count down to some random event like some weird music festival opening or the anniversary of a ship sinking. When it hits zero it announces the event and moves onto the next one.