Results 16 to 17 of 17
Thread: Home-made fireball
-
16th June 2007, 11:19 PM #16
The same can occure with wood, have seen the remnants of a 6" wheel after a seaman replaced several hammer handles grinding the tops into shape and clogging the wheel then went to sharpening cold chisles , had to press hard cause the wheel wasn't working properly , all got hot and boom, blew a bloody great chunk out the front and side of the wheel but the lucky idiot wasn't hurt , came and complained that the grinder wasn't working properly and was shaking when it ran , yes he had run it again and tried to use the other wheel it was so out of balance I had to skim the rotor where it touched the case and replace all the bearings
Ashore
The trouble with life is there's no background music.
-
22nd June 2007, 02:20 AM #17
BobL is right. Thermite does need an intensive heat source to "set it off". I used to use it when I worked on the Nullabor in the early '70's when the ANR were replacing the old 45lb rail track with 90lb. Damn hot stuff.
If you never made a mistake, you never made anything!
Similar Threads
-
Home Made Dyes
By peter in forum FINISHINGReplies: 1Last Post: 9th October 2002, 08:24 PM
Bookmarks