h a l f b a k e r yInexact change.
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Oops. Dinner and drinks with friends last night, halfbaking before bed, and lack of spell check. Bad combination. Thanks, fixed. |
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I didn't mean a steam cannon [FT]. The water causes melted candle wax to... what's the word, aerosolize I think, and creates an exothermic reaction. [link] 2 |
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I understand the first link well enough: LOx + heavy paraffins = boom. |
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But the second is mistifying. |
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<Insert generic "You have totally failed to grasp even the basic principles and physical chemistry of propellants and gas-expansion projectile weapons" rant here> |
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Erm, I'd say the hot melted wax makes the water vaporize instantly, which splatters the wax out in little bits, which then burn in the air. There's no chemical reaction between wax and water, and it's the water that is expanding. The hot wax just supplies the heat to the water, and as splatters, burns a lot faster than it was going to. |
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Sorry Mr. [of 7]. I will endeavor to grasp harder. If the melted wax contained an oxidizer would it work? See, I thought it went more along the lines of the old, light an extinguished candle from its smoke, trick. and that the wax smoke itself is flamable. The water droplet sinks and expands sending out a volley of wax droplets which each trail a thin stream of wax vapour starting a chain reaction. |
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As long as there is enough oxygen to combust the entire wax content then why would this not push a projectile? |
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My current hybrid road bike is a cannondale. |
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Depends on if it is made of titanium or not. |
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Titanium can be made to explode. |
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Tell me what cannot be made to explode? |
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// Tell me what cannot be made to explode? // |
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Plenty of things. By 'made to explode' I mean that the
substance itself can actually have combustible or
explosive properties. I apologize for my ambiguous prose. |
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I'm not confident that this would propel the projectile
forward. Remember that demonstration where you light a
candle inside a flask, and then stick a peeled egg on top.
The candle soon goes out due to asphyxiation, and the egg
gets sucked in due to decreased air pressure inside the
flask. Though I don't actually know if the decrease in P,V is
due to decreased n from the combustion, or decreased T as
the candle-heated air in the flask cools. (PV = nRT) |
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