so your saying all compressed gas is flammable? god....lolBC Pneumatics wrote:Zeigs- I am made in the USA thank you very much, and, if you would have bothered to read.... the compressed gas is in fact flammable. Bleed the tanks if it worries you.
I never said the US made shoddy products, be they are NOT precision grade instruments. (Not the flamethrowers I mean) An army of experience and sense will follow the KISS rule... Go T-34's!
Flame Thrower > Real One
- zeigs spud
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No. I said "the compressed gas is in fact flammable" 'THE' referring the the gas used in flamethrowers
To meet your ludicrous standards, I would have to have said "compressed gas is in fact flammable" Notice the lack of 'the'.
Pay attention next time.
To meet your ludicrous standards, I would have to have said "compressed gas is in fact flammable" Notice the lack of 'the'.
Pay attention next time.
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- zeigs spud
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lol omg you are retarded. the military would not put a flammable gas to force out the fuel in the flame thrower. god... 
EDIT- hmk i think i get whts goin on here. u think the compressed gas is the fuel huh? the military flame throwers don't just compress the fuel they use a separate chamber that has a nonflammable compressed gas in to to force out the fuel.
am i right or was my first response good lol?
EDIT- hmk i think i get whts goin on here. u think the compressed gas is the fuel huh? the military flame throwers don't just compress the fuel they use a separate chamber that has a nonflammable compressed gas in to to force out the fuel.
am i right or was my first response good lol?
Last edited by zeigs spud on Wed Mar 14, 2007 8:29 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- BC Pneumatics
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You are joking... right? Besides the use of N2, a flammable gas is almost always used.zeigs spud wrote:lol omg you are retarded. the military would not put a flammable gas to force out the fuel in the flame thrower. god...
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wait, but they do use a flammable gas to push out the fuel in military flamethrowers. Both you guys are confusing me. And this thread has seriosly gotten screwed up, lottery and flamethrowers, what the hell kind of combination is that?
- zeigs spud
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lol the combination of fun!
why would they use flamable gas to push out the flame throwers fuel?! then ur left with an unpressuized tank of flamable stuff.
why would they use flamable gas to push out the flame throwers fuel?! then ur left with an unpressuized tank of flamable stuff.
- BC Pneumatics
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They used to use only flammable gases as far as I know. I know that some now-a-days use N2.
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- BC Pneumatics
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No, you are left with a stream of flammable gases flowing through a tank. The used flammable gases becasue they are cheap, easy to deal with, and don't contain oxidizers.
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- zeigs spud
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hmk you win this one but i'll be back! lol
hmk back to the vids ^_^
hmk back to the vids ^_^
- BC Pneumatics
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Indeed, let's try to get back on track.
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They also used them to allow fewer tanks, my grand dad had a world war 2 one and it was only two tanks but it was still really heavy. Like bc said (who double posted by the way...for shame.) The flammable gas was cheap, easy to obtain, and by using it to pressurize the fuel reduced the weight of the enitre setup because there was one less tank.
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hmm intresting....i also have heard (from history channel cuz i am that cool) that they could only fire the ww1 and ww2 ones for a short while because it would literaly suck the air out of you.
- BC Pneumatics
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What do you mean? As in replace their surrounding oxygen with propellant gases?
Last edited by BC Pneumatics on Wed Mar 14, 2007 8:55 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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me? what lol?! no no a guy they interviewed said that they only could fire it in short bursts becuase the heat was intense and the flame was so big it would suck the air out of your lungs being so close to it that is.
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Well there was no sucking going on, but being around an intense flame leaves some serious want of fresh air.
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