Ahh. So it burns too fast to heat and melt and mix to the joints being welded.
Makes sense.
Ahh. So it burns too fast to heat and melt and mix to the joints being welded.
Makes sense.
You think that’s fun, try a thermic lance…
Yes, and then again, no. I found out much to my dismay, and much to my colleague’s amusement*, if your powder is even the slightest bit damp (or has any impurities that will vaporize easily), you get a flash explosion, not a burn. :o Your sample needs to be really dry! When I tried this again (with a fresh sample), I got it to burn straight through a coffee can (upside down over sand). The aluminum of the can bottom melted, dripped, then froze into nifty stalagtites! I even managed to weld the small aluminum pie tin onto the coffee can. Even that, though, took an awful lot of patience getting the dang magnesium to light and catch the thermite. And I made sure that I was over non-combustable material and had a fire extinguisher handy. (Not for the thermite - it has it’s own oxygen supply, but for anything it might have caught.)
So basically, I’m saying do not try this at home!
*We are (among other things) chemistry teachers; I was only trying a tiny amount, but, as stated, the podwer was not bone-dry :smack: , and it went fooomp! :mad: , and the look on my face was appearently priceless! But then we both had a good laugh!
This is “Rough Science”, by the way. British show.
That’s it. Fairly interesting show, though I’ve only seen a couple of episodes of it.
So what’s a ‘thermic lance’?
Slightly different beast. It’s a hollow steel tube loosely packed with thin iron rods or a rolled iron sheet, with oxygen pumped through it. When ignited, the high temperatures of the iron-oxygen combustion reaction can be used to cut through nearly anything, including rock and ceramics. Naturally, everything is consumed in the reaction, including the enclosing tube, so the thing gets shorter and shorter as you cut. It’s pretty spectacular to watch, too.
For when you absolutely, positively, HAVE to get into that bank vault in a hurry.
There are lots of other uses , but that’s the context most often mentioned, curtesy of Hollywood.
I can’t remember what the Navy called these things. We had one on my aircraft carrier around '88 or '89 to be used for emergency access if we had to go through a bulkhead. The first time I saw it used we all looked like this :eek:
A really cool very expensive piece of equipment.
-time to do some online shopping…
What? No references to Batman? It’s Batman’s all-purpose incindiary device. IRL, it’s the stuff that people already posted about.
Thermic lances are for girls. Real men manipulate it.
On this distinction, outside of rocketry, I was under the impression that the difference between motor and engine was whether it propelled itself or not. A table saw has a motor and a car has an engine. I guess another “fact” I thought I knew is flying out the fricking window…
Nitpick: oxalate ion is C[sub]2[/sub]O[sub]4[/sub][sup]2-[/sup]. Oxide ion is O[sup]2-[/sup].
You are probably thinking of iron(II) oxide (FeO) vs. iron(III) oxide (Fe[sub]2[/sub]O[sub]3[/sub]).
I have heard the thermic lance referred to as an oxygen lance.
It’s funny that “the Thing” (1951) was on TCM this morning. They use a thermite bomb to melt the flying saucer out of the ice. (And destroy the saucer in the process).
The other name by which they are known is ‘burning bar’. Rent the 1981 movie ‘Thief’ starring James Caan to see him take on a pressure-style vault door using a burning bar. Speaking as a former bank equipment guy, it’s technically one of the better films made.
That would be a Portable Emergency Cutting Unit, and let me just say that those things are freaking awesome.
IIRC, Doc Savage used to wear vest buttons made of thermite–handy for those obligatory escape scenes.
Damn you danceswithcats, I’ve been waiting for someone to make a movie reference so I could throw that in!
Yup, even engineers can’t always agree what’s an “engine” or a “motor” in some cases. It’s sort of like that whole “Is Pluto a planet or not?” debate.
I read in a book some years ago about a guy who said he put a pile of thermite on the hood of an old junk car, ignited it, and watched it burn through the hood and engine down to the ground :eek: No mention of how large the pile was, however.
Is this possible? From what I have read here, the reaction is too quick or would require a large pile of thermite to burn long and hard enough to do this. Am I wrong or is the burning that long and intense?
Was it a VW Beetle, by chance? That might make a somewhat spectacular display.