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- CHEMICAL FIRE BOTTLE
- The chemical fire bottle is really an advanced molotov cocktail. Rather
- than using the burning cloth to ignite the flammable liquid, which has at best
- a fair chance of igniting the liquid, the chemical fire bottle utilizes the
- very hot and violent reaction between sulfuric acid and potassium chlorate.
- When the container breaks, the sulfuric acid in the mixture of gasoline sprays
- onto the paper soaked in potassium chlorate and sugar. The paper, when struck
- by the acid, instantly bursts into a white flame, igniting the gasoline. The
- chance of failure to ignite the gasoline is less than 2%, and can be reduced
- to 0%, if there is enough potassium chlorate and sugar to spare.
- MATERIALS EQUIPMENT
- ÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ ÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ
- potassium chlorate 12 oz.glass bottle
- (2 teaspoons)
- sugar (2 teaspoons) cap for bottle, w/plastic inside
- conc. sulfuric acid (4 oz.) cooking pan with raised edges
- gasoline (8 oz.) paper towels
- glass or plastic cup and spoon
- 1) Test the cap of the bottle with a few drops of sulfuric acid to make sure
- that the acid will not eat away the bottle cap during storage. If the acid
- eats through it in 24 hours, a new top must be found and tested, until a
- cap that the acid does not eat through is found. A glass top is excellent.
- 2) Carefully pour 8 oz. of gasoline into the glass bottle.
- 3) Carefully pour 4 oz. of concentrated sulfuric acid into the glass bottle.
- Wipe up any spills of acid on the sides of the bottle, and screw the cap on
- the bottle. Wash the bottle's outside with plenty of water. Set it aside
- to dry.
- 4) Put about two teaspoons of potassium chlorate and about two teaspoons of
- sugar into the glass or plastic cup. Add about 1/2 cup of boiling water,
- or enough to dissolve all of the potassium chlorate and sugar.
- 5) Place a sheet of paper towel in the cooking pan with raised edges. Fold
- the paper towel in half, and pour the solution of dissolved potassium
- chlorate and sugar on it until it is thoroughly wet. Allow the towel to
- dry.
- 6) When it is dry, put some glue on the outside of the glass bottle containing
- the gasoline and sulfuric acid mixture. Wrap the paper towel around the
- bottle, making sure that it sticks to it in all places. Store the bottle
- in a place where it will not be broken or tipped over.
- 7) When finished, the solution in the bottle should appear as two distinct
- liquids, a dark brownish-red solution on the bottom, and a clear solution
- on top. The two solutions will not mix. To use the chemical fire bottle,
- simply throw it at any hard surface.
- 8) NEVER OPEN THE BOTTLE, SINCE SOME SULFURIC ACID MIGHT BE ON THE CAP, WHICH
- COULD TRICKLE DOWN THE SIDE OF THE BOTTLE AND IGNITE THE POTASSIUM
- CHLORATE, CAUSING A FIRE AND/OR EXPLOSION.
- 9) To test the device, tear a small piece of the paper towel off the bottle,
- and put a few drops of sulfuric acid on it. The paper towel should
- immediately burst into a white flame.
- BOTTLED GAS EXPLOSIVES
- Bottled gas, such as butane for refilling lighters, propane for propane
- stoves or for bunsen burners, can be used to produce a powerful explosion. To
- make such a device, all that a simple-minded anarchist would have to do would
- be to take his container of bottled gas and place it above a can of Sterno or
- other gelatinized fuel, light the fuel and run. Depending on the fuel used,
- and on the thickness of the fuel container, the liquid gas will boil and
- expand to the point of bursting the container in about five minutes.
- In theory, the gas would immediately be ignited by the burning gelatinized
- fuel, producing a large fireball and explosion. Unfortunately, the bursting of
- the bottled gas container often puts out the fuel, thus preventing the
- expanding gas from igniting. By using a metal bucket half filled with
- gasoline, however, the chances of ignition are better, since the gasoline is
- less likely to be extinguished. Placing the canister of bottled gas on a bed
- of burning charcoal soaked in gasoline would probably be the most effective
- way of securing ignition of the expanding gas, since although the bursting of
- the gas container may blow out the flame of the gasoline, the burning charcoal
- should immediately re-ignite it. Nitrous oxide, hydrogen, propane, acetylene,
- or any other flammable gas will do nicely.
- During the recent gulf war, fuel/air bombs were touted as being second only
- to nuclear weapons in their devastating effects. These are basically similar
- to the above devices, except that an explosive charge is used to rupture the
- fuel container and disperse it over a wide area. a second charge is used to
- detonate the fuel. The reaction is said to produce a massive shockwave and to
- burn all the oxygen in a large area, causing suffocation.
- Another benefit of a fuel-air explosive is that the gas will seep into
- fortified bunkers and other partially-sealed spaces, so a large bomb placed in
- a building would result in the destruction of the majority of surrounding
- rooms, rendering it structurally unsound.
- Exodus '94
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