h a l f b a k e r yBone to the bad.
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Mini burners are routinely used in NYC to remove gum from the sidewalk. So I guess this is not completely outside the bounds of possibility. |
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Is it only the underground/subway that is especially watchful for fire hazards? I also question the environmental downside of uncontrolled burning of litter. A battery-driven vacuum cleaner on your shoulders or hip? |
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//The flamethrower could also be used to destroy wasps nests and doggie poop // |
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Wasp's nests, yes. But don't be tempted to turn a flamethrower on doggie poop, especially in a confined space (unless you have no sense of smell, are wearing a gas mask, and have a clothespeg on your nose). |
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This is a mistake I made when de-weeding my garden once and it is something I am not anxious to repeat. |
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There is a mini garden flamethrower available in the UK that runs of a small can of butane so the enabling technology exists. You'd still have to sweep up the ash, though ..... what about the scorch marks on the floor ? |
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But it involves burning stuff, so I will give it a croissant for encouraging pyromania. |
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It would probably be a really inefficient burn and so enviromentally a Bad Thing, and could take forever to clear the litter. You probably wouldn't want to use it in countries with driy climates, for fear of burning down the countryside. Perhaps the best way to keep stations clean (in England anyway) is to supply bins, something they don't do at the moment. |
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There's no bins in the London stations because they are prime targets for bombs.
However, I did see a documentary some weeks ago that detailed a bin made of some kind of composite material that absorbs bomb blasts. |
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[gm150] have you ever melted polystyrene? It just makes a sticky black mess. |
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