• Bonehead
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    239 months ago

    This is so wrong. You don’t stuff the cloth into the bottle, you cap the bottle and tie the cloth around the neck. Then you soak the cloth in gas when you’re ready to light it. Much safer with no risk of spilling.

    • @[email protected]
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      109 months ago

      The pro move it to get some phosphorus and drop it inside the bottle. The phosphorus auto ignites once the bottle is broken and it’s exposed to air. No messing with open flame, just throw and wait for your federal indictment for building firebombs.

      Failing that, use a storm match instead of rag. Much easier to handle and less likely to snuff out.

      Welcome to another watchlist, it’s more fun with friends! 🥰

        • @[email protected]
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          -19 months ago

          Phosphorous is shipped immersed in a bottle of oil for exactly that reason

          And good luck with potassium chlorate, that’s been an IED precursor chemical used by terrorists for years

            • @[email protected]
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              29 months ago

              I’ll cop to coming at this knowledge from conflict journalism and military affairs instead of a chemistry degree certainly, but you posted the age old Anarchists Cookbook version of fire bombs with the chlorate wrapper, friend - both are incredibly dangerous to the user in transit and/or accidentally dropped. Multiple other alkali metals will also work by the same mechanism, it doesn’t have to be phosphorus. If you follow conflicts and militant groups, you do mostly see the rag in bottle, then the storm matches method, with any other mode vastly underrepresented because rag+bottle+fuel works well enough and is cheap.

              Amateurs and militants do a lot of stupid moves that can be severely detrimental to your continued life like using RF/phone detonators instead of timers or command wires. That doesn’t mean it isn’t an effective and expedient armament.

                • @[email protected]
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                  09 months ago

                  WP suspended inside a flammable liquid is a thing that has been done, both by state and non state actors.

                  On 29 July 1940, manufacturers Albright and Wilson of Oldbury demonstrated to the Royal Air Force how their white phosphorus could be used to ignite incendiary bombs. The demonstration involved throwing glass bottles containing a mixture of petrol (gasoline) and phosphorus at pieces of wood and into a hut. Upon breaking, the phosphorus was exposed to the air and spontaneously ignited; the petrol also burned, resulting in a fierce fire.

      • @[email protected]
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        99 months ago

        I would like to inform all agents that I will put this knowledge to use in Minecraft only.

        • @BonesOfTheMoonOP
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          09 months ago

          I don’t think the fediverse is on any LEO radar.

          • @Woozythebear
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            69 months ago

            It is, and you’re insane if you think otherwise.