Hillarious! I can see it now.Crowbar said:Am I the only one thinking that 5 amps (especially X3) is a helluva lot of juice to be screwing around with in the backyard?
Why not just shut off the breaker to your house, then splice an ignition wire in there. You should get about 200+ amps when you turn it back on. More is better, right? It's AC, though, so be careful. (I'm not serious, don't try this unless you just hate this cold, cruel world...)
eddie said:I cannot remember if they are going to be wired series or parallel... which ever one doesn't suck... I think. Uh, I'm pretty sure it's in series. ...
Fly Navy said:electrical current as low as 70 mA can kill a person.
JIMC5499 said:I just thought of something. You are using standard factory made rocket motors in this thing? Everybody has been trying to help you ignite this thing (my self included) and nobody even thought that you might be playing around with a couple of pounds of high explosives that you are calling rocket motors.
Yeah, nor are we talking about "high" explosives. Those Estes motors are really nothing more than gunpowder packed in a tube with a nozzle. The stuff just burns quickly - no detonation (important distinction).Fly Navy said:Couple of POUNDS? Not even close. Have you ever played with model rockets? There isn't a lot of propellant... unless you're using D or E size engines, and even then, it's not a lot.
HAH! Not even close. A "real" nuke (MM, at least) would have first gone through 2 pages of calculations (all incorrectly), given himself a BOD (Power school grading terminology for "Benefit of the Doubt"), scratched his head, cut off the female end of a household extension cord, abandonded the extension cord in favor of a spare clothes dryer pigtail (b/c 240V is MUCH better than 120V, right?), used some speaker wire he had laying around in his garage to cover the distance from the end of said pigtail to the rocket in his backyard (which is set up 3 feet from a bale of oily rags), wired in a switch he scavenged off of his disassembled walkman, abandoned the switch idea because just touching the wire ends together is easier, abandoned the whole electronic ignition idea in favor of a butane grill lighter because, well, that's even easier...then he would tell his div-O that the burn marks and burnt eyebrows were the result of a Flaming Lambourghini gone terribly wrong...while telling his fellow MM's that they're the result of a homemade Napalm grenade he made out of Tide and gasoline.Brett327 said:Have we "nuked" this thing enough yet? :tongue2_1
Brett
Now that's funny. Your average MM nuke types don't have a clue about electricity and don't want to know.nfo2b said:That's how an MM(N) would "nuke" things out.
nfo2b said:... That's how an MM(N) would "nuke" things out. :banghead_
eddie said:... I believe this is series wiring. ...
Somebody (not on this board) gave me that same example before, but apparently got series and parallel mixed up. I guess this is how "bad gouge" spreads...The Chief said:Uhh, No!
In a series circuit, failure of one component in the loop will call the entire loop to fail, e.g., some christmas tree lighting strings, bulb goes out, all go out.
Parallel loop, failure of one component can/may/might affect the loop but in itself will not cause loop failure.