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Hardware

Harvesting Capacitors for Backyard Munitions 430

Diabolus writes "This is the tale of a man, a bunch of disposable cameras, and his techniques for harvesting lots of capacitors to build a gauss gun. Insane..." A basic capacitor tutorial is probably in order.
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Harvesting Capacitors for Backyard Munitions

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  • by billbaggins ( 156118 ) on Thursday July 11, 2002 @11:49PM (#3868843)
    Yes, the bandwidth is horrific, so I've shrunk all the images to a much smaller size (160 wide) instead of their usual 640 and 320. If you want to see this and actually make out the pictures (and read the text in them), come back in a week or so when the traffic has dropped and I've put the full-res ones back. Assuming I don't get firewalled off first :)

    And I bet it still won't work....

  • I remember taking apart the Data Checker system that was manufactured by National Semiconductor in 1979 which I acquired from my highschool. It had some of the largest capaciters I've ever seen. The largest one was probably around 4 inches in diameter. If only I had had this guy's idea first.... :)
    • Actually, it's not the size of the capacitor that really matters. I own several capacitors that are over 6 inches in diameter, and they are far from my most powerfull. In fact, the capacitors in camera flashes are more powerfull. You can even get capacitors the size of garbage cans (they're about 3 feet high and 2 feet across). My friend and I we're concidering buying one just for the shock factor (no pun intended). However, the most powerfull capacitor I have seen is actually no biger around than a quarter and about 1 cm high. It's capacitance ... 1 Farad (a massive amount if you know anything about capacitors, maybe it's time for better units, see prev article).
      • Dude, check the voltages on those "powerful" "quarter-sized" capacitors before you go and build one of these based on capacitance alone. I bet if you add it up, they turn out to have the same energy-density as the other ones.
  • IANAL, but.. (Score:2, Insightful)

    by fadeaway ( 531137 )
    Isn't it, oh, I don't know, kind of illegal to manufacture weapons that far surpass anything the army currently has, or will have in the next 20 years? =P
    • Re:IANAL, but.. (Score:2, Insightful)

      by billstr78 ( 535271 )
      I'm a, pretty sure the Army has munitions far more sophisticated than a bunch of camera capacitors strung together in parrallel today. I don't think anyone has even concieved of what they will have in 20 years. The military has always required the most cutting edge technology to develop weapons. This is not cutting edge.
    • I did a little research a few months ago cause a friend was building a bear rifle.

      According to the ATF it is not illegal to make your own gun provided it is not a semi automatic and the person is not making it for sale and the person is allowed to possess a firearm.

      A7) Does the GCA prohibit anyone from making a handgun, shotgun or rifle? [treas.gov]

      With certain exceptions a firearm may be made by a nonlicensee provided it is not for sale and the maker is not prohibited from possessing firearms. However, a person is prohibited from making a semiautomatic assault weapon or assembling a nonsporting semiautomatic rifle or nonsporting shotgun from imported parts. In addition, the making of an NFA firearm requires a tax payment and approval by ATF. An application to make a machinegun will not be approved unless documentation is submitted showing that the firearm is being made for a federal or state agency. [18 U. S. C. 922( o), (r), (v), and 923, 27 CFR 178.39, 178.40, 178.41 and

      • With certain exceptions a firearm may be made by a nonlicensee provided it is not for sale and the maker is not prohibited from possessing firearms. However, a person is prohibited from making a semiautomatic assault weapon or assembling a nonsporting semiautomatic rifle or nonsporting shotgun from imported parts. In addition, the making of an NFA firearm requires a tax payment and approval by ATF. An application to make a machinegun will not be approved unless documentation is submitted showing that the firearm is being made for a federal or state agency. [18 U. S. C. 922( o), (r), (v), and 923, 27 CFR 178.39, 178.40, 178.41 and

        None of which is actually relevant, seeing as this is not a firearm. There may be applicable laws (I'm sure there are, but probably not any) but the stuff you are referencing simply doesn't apply to gauss guns anymore than it does a homemade crossbow or staff-sling (either of which would probably be comparable for destructive capability with this guys gauss gun, if he ever gets it working, btw.)

      • Well, the one I built is 30mm but it isn't a semi-auto so I guess it is ok.
    • Next week we'll see an article on eleceng geek defense contractor startup.
  • by lingqi ( 577227 ) on Friday July 12, 2002 @12:03AM (#3868907) Journal
    fry a diode, for example [caltech.edu]
  • Flux? (Score:5, Funny)

    by jcsehak ( 559709 ) on Friday July 12, 2002 @12:03AM (#3868911) Homepage
    No info on flux capacitors? Damn, guess I'll never get back to the 2030's...
    • Re:Flux? (Score:5, Funny)

      by Cyno01 ( 573917 ) <Cyno01@hotmail.com> on Friday July 12, 2002 @12:34AM (#3869035) Homepage
      if you call radio shack and ask if they have flux capacitors in stock, they'll tell you they're out, but they should be getting some in about two weeks
      • Re:Flux? (Score:2, Funny)

        by Tsian ( 70839 )
        Actually, I work at Radio Shack... we'll tell you that because its easier then explaining why They don't exist. I mean come on, if your coming to *me* for parts, thinking a flux capacitor exists is the least of your problems...
        • Re:Flux? (Score:5, Funny)

          by Tablizer ( 95088 ) on Friday July 12, 2002 @02:03AM (#3869232) Journal
          (* Actually, I work at Radio Shack... we'll tell you that because its easier then explaining why They don't exist. I mean come on, if your coming to *me* for parts, thinking a flux capacitor exists is the least of your problems... *)

          Dude, make one up quickly in the back room and sell it to them for 300 bucks. When they come back complaining, ask them if they have a degree in nuclear physics. When they say, "no", then politely take it back, minus a 95 dollar restocking and time-diffusion recharge fee, which you pocket.
          • A $95 stocking fee! Are you insane! We'd go out of bussiness if we charged that. I mean my GOD, it'll cost atleast $125 to restock that!
    • Damn, guess I'll never get back to the 2030's...

      No, you'll just have to travel at 60 minutes/hour like the rest of us.

      Besides, I hear society is going to collapse when the unix time type runs out in 2037 anyway....
      • Re:Flux? (Score:2, Funny)

        by 2g3-598hX ( 586789 )
        Besides, I hear society is going to collapse when the unix time type runs out in 2037 anyway

        No it will be far worse than that, time_t will overflow and go back to 0 and society will instantaneously jump back 2^32 seconds - To 1970!

        Get your bell bottoms out people...
        • No it will be far worse than that, time_t will overflow and go back to 0 and society will instantaneously jump back 2^32 seconds - To 1970!

          Oh my god, not another crappy seventies revival...

    • Dammit, I thought it said "Floss Capacitors". Now the Novicane is starting to wear off, and it smarts.
  • Yeah, so he's got a bunch of "basically" free caps. Now what? Solder a bunch together?
    Seems like a lot of work for a huge mess of solder and wires for what would amount to a fraction of what a single car-audio capacitor would put out.

    Am I missing something, or is his time worth nothing?

    Karma: Excellent
    WTF?
    • by shepd ( 155729 ) <slashdot.org@gmai l . c om> on Friday July 12, 2002 @12:40AM (#3869049) Homepage Journal
      >Am I missing something, or is his time worth nothing?

      Yes, you are missing something.

      Car audio capacitor: 16-20 volts @ .1 F.
      Camera flash capacitor: 330 volts @ 120 uF.

      Now lets see, using the formula E = 1/2 * U^2 * C [epanorama.net], how many joules are in each capacitor.

      Car audio capacitor: E = 20 Joules
      Flash capacitor: E = 6.534 Joules

      Car Cap: $40 or $2 per joule.
      Disposable camera: $5 or $0.76 per joule.

      Camera caps are far cheaper, and this guy got them for free.
    • by thesupraman ( 179040 ) on Friday July 12, 2002 @12:41AM (#3869053)
      Yes, you are missing the fact that most 'car audio' capacitors are 'rubbish' (to be polite) and are simply a method or removing money from peoples pockets.

      For his purposes he requires an actual high capacity, high discharge rate capacitor, not an easy thing to create.

      The challenge is having a VERY low ESR (effective series resistance), as well as a low inductance, and using a massive number of parallel capacitors is certainly one of the only economical ways of doing this. a LOT of care is also needed in how they are connected up to keep the inductance down.

      You can, for example, by multi-farad 'supercaps', but these have charge/discharge rates in the milliamps and are used for memory backup and other purposes, you can also get kilovolt rated caps with very low capacitance, but it is very hard to get medium voltage very low ESR high energy caps, primarily because they are lethal. They are used in radar installations and a few other high energy 'toys'.
    • by Uberminky ( 122220 ) on Friday July 12, 2002 @01:03AM (#3869102) Homepage
      I don't know anything about car capacitors, so perhaps this is a useless answer, but.... capacitor banks, rather than single large capacitors, are used in high-current circuits because they can crank out a whole lot more current a lot quicker when you have lots of small ones in parallel. This is frequently done even on small bypass capacitors in circuits -- rather than putting a few thousand microfarads on a motor, you might put several 470uF caps, for instance. The response is much quicker. So not surprisingly, this is the way you always do experiments that require frightening amounts of juice.
  • by MarkusQ ( 450076 ) on Friday July 12, 2002 @12:18AM (#3868966) Journal

    Be careful if you try this; those capacitors hold a fair amount of charge.

    My brothers and I played with some of them in the kitchen at a family gathering a few years back. One of them is in the biz, and had more used, disposable cameras then he knew what to do with. We were bored and trying to rig up something ad-hoc (as I recall, we were using whatever we could find in the kitchen--rubber bands, tupperware, etc.) Our wives were in the dining room with the everyone else, and we weren't being very structured about it.

    Things were going fairly well until we accidentally shorted something. There was a loud bang, a flash, and one of us jumped back, knocking over a pile of pie tins.

    All conversation in the dining room stopped, and after a moment our mother's voice called calmly: "What are you boys doing in there?"

    Without missing a beat we all replied, in unison, "Nothing!"

    It was like old times.

    -- MarkusQ

  • by Random Bystander ( 548230 ) on Friday July 12, 2002 @12:27AM (#3869012)
    Does this mean we won't be able to take disposable cameras on to planes any more?

    Imagine the memo to baggage scanning technicians:
    "WARNING: Any passengers attempting to take large numbers of disposable cameras on board any flight is a terrorist. These cameras can be used as a weapon by assembling a gauss gun from their parts. Call your appropriate superviser IMMEDIATELY if you have any suspicions"
  • some comments (Score:3, Interesting)

    by lingqi ( 577227 ) on Friday July 12, 2002 @12:53AM (#3869084) Journal
    while this is cool and geeky as f*king heck... it's a bit over done.

    1) you can buy capacitors for less trouble. true, large 330V caps does cost money and he is getting this for next to nothing, but i think it's better to shell out a couple hundred bux for components for that gauss gun instead of subjecting myself to hours upon hours of de-soldering and discharging capacitors and getting flashed.

    2) if you *really wanted*, you can also pull caps off old TVs, or any CRT in general; and they can go up to 20kV! heck man... for self-mutilation fun, doesn't 20kV sound better than 0.3kV? (erm... becareful when you do this. those caps can hold charge for like 20 years)

    3) you can achieve the same with a large (i mean gigantic) low voltage capacitor, which would actually handle more current anyhow. (car) Audiophiles probabbly know what i am talking about. there are 10-15V capacitors for your huge woofers that carry up to 10 FARADS. nope you did not read this wrong... 10F, no m,u,n,p; straight up 10F. if you wanted the high voltage, either build yourself a HV transformer (easy) or salvage one from a junkyard (you know, ignition system).

    but otherwise, rock on. i would like to see the 5kJ gauss gun in action someday, preferably tested on a furby or something
  • I have a very large vacuum capacitor which I'm not sure what to do with. It looks really neat (images: http://novalis.org/images/photo/vacuum_capacitor/) . The glass is about eight cm in diameter.

    Does anyone know anything about things like this? Is it worth anything?
  • Fun With Capacitors (Score:3, Interesting)

    by deathcow ( 455995 ) on Friday July 12, 2002 @01:12AM (#3869126)
    I remember my friend and I in 1992 to sitting around and playing with capacitors. We were even getting paid. We were hooking them up reversed polarity on a small DC power supply. They EXPLODE. We were doing small caps. Big caps would be too scary. We were putting them in the McDonalds quarter pounder with cheese styrofoam boxlets that were sold back then. Remember those? They add to the effect. I will always have that mental image of DC power leads running out of a closed McDonalds QPw/C container.
  • by Monkelectric ( 546685 ) <{slashdot} {at} {monkelectric.com}> on Friday July 12, 2002 @01:23AM (#3869146)
    Ok, when I was 17 (long ago, but not too long) I went on a band trip to Hawaii (you laugh now, but did you school send you to hawaii?:). The school gave us packs of junk, chewing gum, deck of cards, and disposable cameras as a goodwill gesture (I gather). I was the section leader for the tenor sax players -- if you've ever met any tenor sax players you know they are the bigest screwoffs in the world (I've often wondered -- does being a screwoff make you choose the tenor sax as an instrument, or do you become a screwoff after choosing it?).

    Anyways, I was responsible for 4 complete goobers and one gorgeous blonde (who really dosent have anyhting to with the story, but I just want to mention her), which was not an enviable task. They got bored on the plane to hawaii and took apart their disposable camera ... well low and behold they figured out about the only thing you can do with a broken disposable camera is shock shit or get shocked. After some dumb luck (getting shocked in the first place) and some trial and error, they figure out if you touched these leads and pressed that button youd get shocked ... so the next step was to walk around the plane getting people to hold the leads so they could shock them (someday Id like to know why you would hold two leads a 14 year old asked you to).

    So one afternoon our scheduled activity was to hang out in this park because thats damn cheap :) and well now you have to know about the director ... he was this big fat, raunchy, disgusting fat fuck who happened to be one of the best directors in the nation, and he had this even fatter and even rauncher wife their two skinny (but soon to be fat kids). The wife was horrible annoying and the kids were even worse, the whole band was sick of them. Meanwhile in the park, the band was getting pretty restless, shocking eachother with cameras actually became entertainment :) So these guys I am responsible for are shocking eathother, Im hitting on the blonde (amy hays if you're out there... ;-) ), and oie of the directors sons walks up and he says "Hey what are you guys doing?" (the kid couldn't have been more then 6 or 7) One of the worst jerkoffs in my section gets this HUGE grin on his face and he says, "I'll show you. you touch this and this, and then press this button" Meanwhile I look over and see whats going on, as Im screaming "nooooooooooooooooooooo!!" in slow motion like the matrix, the kid shocks the crap out of himself and I swear he almost pissed his pants as he took off running. We never got in trouble so I dont suppose he told his father :) but we were paranoid the whole rest of the trip.

    on an unrelated topic, couldn't this guy just buy a couple 1 farad capacitors? Those are pretty popular with car audio buffs, they run maybe between 100 - 200$ a piece, I think that would be so much easier then getting UV burns like this guy is describing :D

    • I was such a stupid dweeb back then that I probably would have zapped the gorgious blond instead. Girls were like a fascinating toy that I didn't know quite what to do with. It was the case that bad interaction was better than no interaction, I would calculate.

      Of course, now I am not a stupid dweeb anymore. My therapist assures me of that all the time.
    • if you've ever met any tenor sax players you know they are the bigest screwoffs in the world

      Oh man, if I had a nickel for every wacky tenor sax story I have.... woooo-eeeeee.


    • OK, so how comes I'm the first person to write that? ;)
  • Marx Generator Story (Score:2, Interesting)

    by fdiv(1,0) ( 68151 )
    Back in high school, a friend and I made a Marx Generator [ualberta.ca] from about 7 of these capacitors. The flash tubes in these cameras make wonderful spark gaps, BTW. It took about 30 seconds to charge up the thing, and the output from it lasted for mere picoseconds, but dang was it cool.

    P.S.: Word to the wise: just the task of putting a load across the output terminals can set one of these things off. I was moving one of the terminals with a metal screwdriver and I accidently touched the other contact with my other hand. To this day I do not know how I managed to survive that one.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday July 12, 2002 @02:43AM (#3869303)
    Hi, slashdottee here.

    First of all, there are no pictures of a gauss gun, because it doesn't exist yet. I have the parts for an inverter to charge it, but have not yet assembled it. Not having had much experience with switch mode power supplies, I'm just hoping it doesn't burn down.

    For someone else's (working) effort, check out powerlabs.org [powerlabs.org]

    As to those who think car capacitors, etc might be better, they have a very low voltage rating (eg 15V). E=0.5*C*V^2, so even with a farad the energy isn't that great. Secondly, they are made from *thin* foil and have crappy current ratings, not much good for generating 10kA for 1ms. These are photoflash-rated caps, intended for 1ms discharge times - thick foil, good dielectric and some actual quality control.

    Lastly, the capacitors will have to discharge through an inductor, even if it is only a couple of turns. Lack of voltage means the current rise is too slow (dI/dt = V/L) and so a low voltage, high capacitance bank will not discharge fast enough. Slow discharge means the ring has moved away before it receives much energy.

    I'm also missing large silicon devices to actually discharge the thing. SCRs that can handle 10 or 20kA are not common and seem to cost many hundred of dollars. If anyone's got a spare one, please tell me! Otherwise I will have to make do with lots of smaller devices from surplus shops and build it multi-stage with messy triggering.

    As for energy, consider 0.5*m*V^2. Given about 3 to 5kJ and about 2g of mass, you figure it out. It will be lucky to get 1% efficiency, but still. If it works well, I might have to look into firearms licensing. Big deal.

    To those who say "you're a dickhead, that's lame", well, fair enough. Its not for everyone, and this page wasn't put up for the express of having it critiqued by /. bottom-feeders. I guess you could say "that's just sad", but if you're not an eleceng then you're not going to get what's interesting about this stuff.

    • by Anonymous Coward on Friday July 12, 2002 @07:44AM (#3869865)
      I would not recommend fooling around with microwave ovens in any form, as someone suggested. There is a 4,000V power supply in there which *will* kill you, quite reliably, if you get across it. Much more reliably than standard AC mains power, in fact, because unlike, say, the 30,000V found in a colour TV set, the current from a microwave oven power supply is MUCH higher.

      If you want some high-voltage capacitors, some of the electronic junk shops should still have them from the days of valve electronics, when they were exceedingly common. I recall as a teenager connecting up something like 3,000 microfarads at 600V and charging this up to 380VDC from a 230VAC mains supply.

      This, when discharged, produced especially satisfying results when the target was a small piece of magnesium ribbon, placed under water in a plastic cup.

      The high current vaporised the magnesium which explosively reacted with the water to destroy the cup in a most satisfying way. I imagine that aluminium wire would also work quite well.

      Alas, the innocent experiments of youth would probably today have me rounded up as a terrorist, since amongst other things we also made gunpowder and nitroglycerin (which we never detonated because we were too scared to!).

      Anyone planning on fooling with high voltages and high energies should be aware that even modest voltage and energy levels can cause fatal heart arhythmia if the shock coincides with a vulnerable point in the heart's electrical cycle. I would strongly recommend that you wear insulating gloves while working on any circuitry and be exceedingly careful. Also be aware that capacitors which have been abruptly discharged can then spontaneously recharge without being reconnected to a power source. This could cause a potentially fatal shock, so you should always connect the capacitor terminals together when working on any circuitry.

    • Otherwise I will have to make do with lots of smaller devices from surplus shops and build it multi-stage with messy triggering.

      For all the effort you're going through, I'm surprised you're only planning on a single-stage. I looked into gauss guns a few months ago and came to the conclusion that multi-stage is definately the way to go. Triggering isn't that bad, just a few pulsed LEDs and photo-receptors along the barrel. I gave up when I realized I couldn't afford the SCRs and capacitors (the lingering feeling that I was going to kill myself probably didn't help either). Good luck.
  • by gerardrj ( 207690 ) on Friday July 12, 2002 @03:07AM (#3869336) Journal
    Here's a site [powerlabs.org] that goes in to the math, theory and formulas of a gauss gun. At the bottom of the page there are some links to completed projects. There's an image of a completed gun on the top of the front page.


  • Here's a new weapon idea!

    How about building a device that charges these small flash caps and then fires them out as projectiles. Anyone unfortunate enough to get hit with the contacts gets "knocked on their ass" as many experimenters have discovered.

    I'm gonna pop a 0.22 Farad cap in your ass sucka!
  • Gauss Guns (Score:2, Insightful)

    by ctar ( 211926 )
    Here [powerlabs.org] are a few [scitoys.com] different Gauss Guns, including the one from Half Life! [gamehelp.com]

    Yes, I did just pilfer these sites from Google, but didn't see any other references linked so far, soooo.....
  • by type40 ( 310531 ) on Friday July 12, 2002 @03:57AM (#3869453)
    Back when my dad was highschool there was this girl that was always screwing up things in science class. She could take a weeks worth of a group work project and distroy it in a moment, her only responce when other complaned was "Well it was stupid anyway."
    When my dad had her in his group covering electricity she was no help at all. One day my dad brought in some large capacitors for a class project. He got to class a little early that day, on the counter next to his table he noticed the hand crank generator, a spool of wire, a slinky, and the rivits holding the wood plank seat to the metal legs of the annoying girls chair.
    placing the slinky on her side if the table, running wires from the legs of the chair & slinky to the capacitor then chargeing the hell out of the capacitor with the generator he sat and waited.
    long story short, she sat down, grabed slinky, screamed, got my dad sent to the priest office (it was a Catholic school), dad spent rest of week cleaning church after school, dad got extra credit for "demonstrating practical uses of electricity"
  • by toby360 ( 524944 ) on Friday July 12, 2002 @04:02AM (#3869466)
    Take a look at this Simple Magnet Gauss Rifle [scitoys.com] along with a good description of how it all works.

    Here's a much more powerful Multi Staged Gauss Rifle [powerlabs.org] for anyone interested as well.
  • High school electronics class was a fun time..
    I used to charge up small capacitors and place the leads between the pages in my books. When walking the halls between classes, I would pull them out and shock people. Our halls were pretty crowded so you could be very covert. We also used the capacitor tester as a wimp detetector. Five or so people would hold hands with the end people each getting one of the charging leads. Another person would slowly turn up the voltage until someone wimped out and let go. Normally that person also got a little extra from the resulting arc.
  • When I was a senior in high school, a group of us would hang around in the ahlls before calss and talk. Most of us were "mad-scientist wannabes", and we would discuss our current projects (one guy was trying to make napalm, IIRC).

    Anyway, there was this one sophmore who hung around with us, who was always trying to immitate our projects (usually badly). He was ok, I guess, and it was usually funny to listen to his recent mistakes/problems (like accidently land-mining his room in the middle of the night with exploding paper strips.)

    The hallway at our school were long, with lots of glass, and metal rails running along at about waist height. Usually, all the students would lean against the rails before class.

    Well, one guy in our group had torn apart a disposible lighter and had gotten the electronic igniter out of it. He would touch the wire to the railing, and when he pushed the button, everyone touching the rail would get a shock (very minor shock). It was irritating and fun!

    Well, this sophmore decided to "one-up" us, and managed to get hold of the igniter from a gas stove. The thing was about 10 times as big as the small igniter, and produced a nice, fat spark when pressed.

    IIRC, he managed to shock himself, while the rest of us stood around laughing. I think he finally gave up on trying to shock anyone with that.

    -Ed

    docbrown.net [docbrown.net]
    Graphic Design, Web Design, Role-Playing Games...all the good stuff
  • Using mostly stuff I have lying around in my garage workshop this weekend, I can fry most of the chips in the average server farm, telephone switching facility or the radios used by police, fire and emergency services. If I did it right, I can 86 all of the above at the same time.

    Indeed, I can zap all the control circuits in a modern fly-by-wire jumbo aircraft and make it do a ballistic imitation of a large brick. If I time things right, I can bring a fully fueled jet down right in the middle of San Francisco.

    Can you say "9/11?" Sure you can. So here we are, nine months along, and those who are supposed to protect us are as clueless as ever.

    I could create total electronic chaos and another 9/11 with a homemade, explosively pumped, flux compression generator, and I can do it with data I found on the Internet, including some very helpful stuff from the Los Alamos nuclear lab web site.

    We're talking here about an electromagnetic pulse (EMP) weapon, the neutron bomb of electronic circuits. A garage EMP bomb is amazingly easy to build, especially with a 15-minute Google search.

    Undoubtedly you have read about the EMP weapons we used in the Gulf War and Yugoslavia to take out air defense electronics. What you may not have read about is a 1995 incident when Chechnyan rebels used one to fry security circuits in 1995 to gain access to a Soviet facility.

    Yeah, I've tried for months now to get anyone in power to care. Local law enforcement said it was not their table and to call the Feds. The FBI agent on duty in San Francisco was totally clueless ... said someone would call me back. Not.

    I used to work for U.S. Senator Thad Cochran. So I called one of the staffers I knew, and she referred me to the White House Liaison for Home Security. No call back there, either.

    But maybe an EMP weapon sounds too much like anti-gravity boots and close encounters with Airstream trailer communities in the Mojave and that's why nobody returns calls and nothing gets done.

    But realize this: the NATO document mentions the use of an EMP weapon by Chechnyan rebels. Al-Qaida includes many Chechnyans among the hard-core fighters, thus the usefulness of EMP weapons has surely been transferred to the bad guys still out there looking for an opportunity to make another big splash.

    So, I couldn't just let the non-responses from the FBI and Homeland Defense be the end of the matter. With a little more digging on the Web, I located a DOE phone directory last week and called the folks who are head of security for the national nuclear labs. I actually got a call back and forwarded the information (below) via e-mail. I got a form e-mail reply, but the Los Alamos page (http://www.lanl.gov/dirac/) is still up there.

    Why is the Los Alamos page important? Because it gives me a good look at an actual physical configuration of a real bomb that works. Taken together with the other web pages, it gives me an excellent chance to build a bomb that works.

    Perhaps having the data out there for anyone is a victory for open info on the net, but then how easy DO we want to make it for terrorists? Where is the line between the free flow of information and discussion and giving folks easy access on how to build weapons?

    EMAIL TO NATIONAL LABS SECURITY FOLLOWS

    >Date: Mon, 04 Mar 2002 11:15:26 -0800
    >To: marc.hollander@nnsa.doe.gov
    >From: Lewis Perdue
    >Subject: links
    >
    >Very nice chatting with you. Below are the major links I mentioned.
    >
    >Some detailed background on the threat can be found in a NATO Parliamentary Assembly report at:
    >
    >http://www.nato-pa.int/publications/comre p/2001/a u-221-e.html
    >
    >I quoted from this report at the end of this e-mail. But particularly relevant is the following from that NATO report:
    >
    >"38.The possibility of terrorists using EMP weapons has been raising alarm for at least a decade among defence analysts. According to Winn Schwartau, an information warfare specialist, rudimentary EMP devices have been assembled by US Department of Defense consultants within two weeks at the cost of $500. Such devices, capable of disrupting computers, medical equipment and cars, could be placed in a van or even reduced to fit into a suitcase. Criminal organisations in Russia have been accused of using EMP devices to bypass alarm systems. According to the Russian Armed Forces, Chechen rebels might have used similar technology to disrupt Russian electronic communication equipment."
    >
    >As I mentioned to you, I can describe how such a device could be used to cause another 9/11-type disaster.
    >
    >links:
    >
    >THIS IS A KEY ONE: http://www.infowar.com/mil_c4i/mil_c4i8.html-ssi
    >

    >THE FOLLOWING may seem harmless, but the principles for forming metal, apply directly to an EMP weapon, both in learning how to acquire the capacitors for the construction, and because the electromagnetic pulse formation is very nearly the same.
    >
    >http://www.mse.eng.ohio-state.edu/~daeh n/metalfor minghb/tabofcont/index.html
    >
    >THE FOLLOWING ARE SOURCES FOR THE PULSE POWER CAPACITORS NEEDED ... and monitoring sales could be an early warning. If you can get the manufacturers to look for suspicious purchases it could be a good tripwire.
    >
    >http://www.nwl.com/
    >http://www.ae rovox.com/
    >http://wwwcsif.cs.ucdavis.edu/~wiley/ ppti2.htm l
    >
    >
    >YOU'LL WANT TO FOLLOW LINKS FROM THIS PAGE:
    >http://er6s1.eng.ohio-state.edu/~daehn/hyp erplast icity.html
    >
    >SOME OF THOSE LINKS INCLUDE:
    >
    >Manufacturers of Pulse Power Equipment
    > Maxwell-Magneform
    > IAP Research
    > Elmag, Inc.
    > Pulsar Technologies (welding / crimping)
    > Manget-Physik (German Mfr. of Electromagnetic Forming Hardware & MagnetoPulS® Technology)
    > Kharkov Polytechnic University, Ukraine (research and equipment)
    >
    >Other sites related to high velocity deformation and/or hardware
    >Pulse Power Equipment
    > Richardson Electric (ingitrons)
    > Maxwell Technologies
    > Pulsed Power Technologies, Inc.
    > Pulse Power Switching Overview
    > Fantastically Dangerous Cap. Bank Experiments
    > Aerovox Corp. (capacitor mfgr. )
    > Darrah Electronics (solid state switching)
    > Contents of IEEE Pulsed Power Conferences
    >
    >High Velocity Forming and Pulse Power Applications
    > EMF Industries, Inc. (assembly with EMF is highlighted)
    > Sparktec Environ mental Corp (uses sparks for water purification)
    > Dana Corporation Develops Improved Magnetic -Pulse Process
    > Electroimpact Home Page (mfr. of electromagnetic dent removers etc.)
    > CONTENTS PAGE - RESEARCH AT SSAU (1997) (Russian welding, etc.)
    > Simple Analysis from J. Krauss Electromagnetics Book
    > Robert Hahn at IWF, Technical Univ. of Berlin (in German)
    >
    >IF YOU WERE DESPERATE FOR C-4 or Semtex for your EMP device, and didn't have a source for the ready-made stuff, you could try here:
    >
    >http://www.phreak.org/archives/The_Hack er_Chronic les_II/pyro/miss2.txt
    >http://www.strange-days.de mon.co.uk/anarchy/bomb/ bombs-1.html
    >
    >FINALLY ....
    >
    >New material continues to be posted on the Web. If you do a search for "flux compression generator" you will find more listings than just the ones above.
    >
    >
    >NATO Parliamentary Assembly
    >http://www.nato-pa.int/publications/comrep/2001 /a u-221-e.html
    >
    >37.Yet another threat seems more imminent. As Ehlers indicated in his report, computer systems and all electronic devices can be seriously damaged by weapons producing electro-magnetic pulses (EMP). High Power Microwaves (HPM) or EMP bombs and High Energy Radio Frequency (HERF) guns can radiate intense pulses of electro-magnetic energy capable of severely damaging computers, radar and all electronic equipment. They can even destroy circuits, microprocessors and other components. These weapons are well-known in Russia, where extensive studies were conducted during the Cold War. The US Air Force used EMP and HERF weapons successfully in 1991 against Iraqi radar installations, and in 1999 against Yugoslav electronic infrastructure.
    >
    >38.The possibility of terrorists using EMP weapons has been raising alarm for at least a decade among defence analysts. According to Winn Schwartau, an information warfare specialist, rudimentary EMP devices have been assembled by US Department of Defense consultants within two weeks at the cost of $500.

    Such devices, capable of disrupting computers, medical equipment and cars, could be placed in a van or even reduced to fit into a suitcase. Criminal organisations in Russia have been accused of using EMP devices to bypass alarm systems. According to the Russian Armed Forces, Chechen rebels might have used similar technology to disrupt Russian electronic communication equipment.
    >
    > 39.In his book Cybershock, Schwartau considers some possible effects of a well-orchestrated EMP attack upon Western infrastructure:
    >
    > Wall Street or other banking systems can be attacked, causing repetitive failures resulting in financial losses. Also past records can be wiped out by onslaughts of electromagnetic pulses; aircraft avionics and guidance systems can be overloaded by targeted HERF, causing potentially deadly conditions; medical equipment can fail under the attack of intense energy spikes, putting human lives in danger; communication nodes can be burned out by intense microwave radiation; municipal emergency services can be made inoperable by debilitating wide-band microwave jamming; power lines and transformers may serve as efficient conductors to transmit huge current to victim businesses and sub-stations, causing regional black-outs.
    >
    >40.The ability to build EMP weapons is apparently quite widespread, yet there are no international controls over the import and export of the related technologies. Defensive techniques, although in some cases expensive, have been partially deployed in the public sector (especially to protect military assets), but remain extremely rare in the private sector.

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