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It was 4:30am. I thought I heard a noise. Looking out the window, I saw a shape on the back deck. Someone was prying on the sliding door, using a screwdriver to pop the latch. He wouldnt get in that way, the doors secured with bolts. Hed have to break the glass. I was not gonna find out if he
was that desperate. I grabbed my SBB, and leaned out the window.
This is no ordinary gun. The ammo is small hollow plastic spheres, the size of marbles, hundreds of them. Theyre fired with compressed air from a nitrogen cylinder, similar to paintballs. The balls have electronic circuits and batteries inside. Most produce a loud noise such as warbling, chirps, or constant tones. Some are ultrasonic. And some have blinking lights. As they are fired, theyre profusely coated with a glowing, scented, rubbery slime, which sticks to skin, clothing, and hair. The batteries will work for half an hour. The sticky material, glow and tracking scent lasts much longer.
I discharged the entire nitrogen cylinder. The surprised burglar ran off, beeping, glowing, and blinking, with those balls stuck in clumps everywhere. The cacophony woke everyone he passed, so the police got complete information on his every move. He was easy to track, right up to his own house. Punk kid. Hed been stealing from neighbors for months. Now hes busted. And taking a long shower.
Skunk Balls
http://www.halfbake.../idea/Skunk_20Balls I'm all in favor of shooting burglars non-lethally. [DrCurry, Oct 04 2004, last modified Oct 05 2004]
for [half]:
http://www.solarbot...4categoryzq311=true These lights would fit in a marble with room to spare. [Amos Kito, Oct 04 2004, last modified Apr 13 2007]
for [half] II:
http://www.intellec...one/earphone_e.html Itty bitty hearing aid speakers. [Amos Kito, Oct 04 2004, last modified Oct 21 2004]
(?) Sheriff (Japan)
http://world.altavi...urity.html&lp=ja_en Jul 21, 2004: Baked? Hard to tell [krelnik, Oct 04 2004, last modified Oct 05 2004]
Mark Pet-L/Office
http://www.engadget...at-the-markpet-was/ [Amos Kito, Apr 13 2007, last modified Oct 18 2008]
[link]
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So he screamed because you shot him in the balls? |
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This non-lethal weapon sounds like a good idea to me except for the part where the ammo is the size of marbles and yet makes enough noise to wake everyone the burglar passes. Is that part actually feasible? |
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Now he'll sue for defamation of character |
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...unless he bought one too. |
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//makes enough noise//
[half], see the navel ring light [link]. Watch batteries and circuitry fit into the projectiles. For the sirens, I'd use a "piezoelectric transducer". My little travel alarm is plenty loud. The batteries won't last long, which is OK. Some tiny compressed gas whistles might do the trick. Check out the [other link] for hearing-aid sized piezo transducers! |
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I have no trouble believing the lights, circuitry, battery part. It's the volume I was wondering about. I doubt that the piezo hearing aid thing would be all that loud. If the burglar could somehow be persuaded to stick the marbles in people's ears, that'd probably wake them. :-) |
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I'm just being overly picky I guess. After all, this is the halfbakery, not the bakery. Since you went to the trouble to politely respond with some supporting links, have a croissant. |
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Agree with [ravens], and croissant. |
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... and if you are not at home at the time of the intrusion, a bucket-load stationed and primed above the door... (tell the cleaner though) |
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People would ignore the sound, like they do now with car alarms. |
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...then they'd lobby against the stuff, after enough 'prank shootings' (remember the paintball pranksters?). |
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I've shot marbles from a paintball gun, just for fun. They have insufficient velocity, unless you dial the gun way up, and then you risk damaging the barrel. |
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More fun was had by freezing paintballs. It was great fun. Where we played, head-shots didn't count so as to discourage people shooting at others' heads. Consequently, observers would stick their heads out, knowing they were invulnerable, and willing to take a stray one or two for the tactical advantage of the vision. With a pot of frozen balls, you'd go for a head-shot and another, and another and another. With no splat marks to prove that you were intentionally nailing the guy in the forehead, tactical balance was restored. |
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"Cheater beaters" are great too, they're realy hard and
full of wax (to discourage wiping). |
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What if the purpetrater took a route through a pond or
river or heavy rain like they do in action movies? Most
devises that emit sound would be rendered useless in
water. |
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How about this: stagger some of the ammo's timers, so that some go off immediately, some later. Lasts longer. |
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I'm not quite sure, but I *think* a Japanese company has baked a version of this. Only their product contains an RFID type device that has the time of the attack encoded in it, so when the burglar/mugger shows up at the hospital, he can be identified as the perpetrator. |
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Or something. Its hard to tell with babelfish. See link. |
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I rather like this! I'm a big fan of non-lethal weapons. Croissant for you! |
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The modern equivelant to tar & feathering. + |
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Sound feasible, even if a round of ammo would set you back a fair amount. The sound thing would work too. Granted a piezo transducer the size of a marble isn't going to wake the neighbours, but with enough of them you could follow the guy easy! Croissant. |
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And if you miss, a pile of beeping, blinking, and aggravating burglar balls at your back door.... |
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I laughed so hard at the title alone that I'm bestow my gummy, warbling croissant atop the pile. |
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Fabulous fun at raves, too. |
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ref krelnik's [link] (babelfish translated) "The mark pet is the crime prevention device of the epoch-making next generation": Whatever a Mark Pet is, I need one. |
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baked i believe... FN Herstal make something very similar they call the FN303. Its powered by a compressed air bottle (good for 110 shots) and each magazine carries 15 shots. |
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"The primary effect is trauma : the shock (15J/cm³) directly neutralizes the aggressor. Secondary effects will be delivered by a chemical payload chosen according to the mission requirements" |
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the 'chemical payloads' include washable and indelible paint, Oleoresin Capsicum (sounds nasty) and are aparently working on 'Clear out' (Oleoresin Capsicum +CS gas), and Illuminant. |
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