Hellbound
Merchant of Doom
Re: Explosions
I've had this argument in the past in 9/11 threads, when I was more active in this subforum.
First, a bit about me. I'm no expert, but I am a U.S. Army trained Combat Engineer. For those who don't know, the missions of a CE are mobility and counter-mobility: we create obsticles to block or slow the enemy, remove structures that help the enemy move, remove obsticles that the enemy may have placed, and build structures to help our troops move. These include things like ditches, berms, walls, bridges, tunnels, craters, and similar. As one might expect, explosives are involved in a large bit of this.
I've been trained in non-electric blasting techniques, both using det cord and MDI. I've also personally experienced explosions ranging from firecrackers and hand grenades, though several-hundred pound explosions of C-4, up to multiple-ton explosions to destroy ordnance.
That being said, the majority of people in the U.S. do NOT know what an explosion sounds like. They get their idea of what explosions are like from movies and TV, which almost unilaterally get it wrong. They expect the large fireball, and the drawn-out, loud rumbling sound lasting several seconds.
That is not what happens.
It's a very sharp and quick boom, and any rumbling there might be would be caused by echos (or multiple charges: structure demolitions usually use multiple charges seperated by time, to control the rate and direction of collapse, and produce a longer, more drawn out sound). Assuming a large enough explosion (or one you're close enough to), you get a push from the shockwave along with this. Usually little flame, mostly a dust cloud and a lot of debris. One of the early Mythbusters episodes, when they destroyed the cement truck, is an excellent example for reference.
The sound associated with the typical movie/TV explosion is much more like what one would expect from a collapse: the loud, long rumbling and shaking lasting several seconds.
It is not unreasonable, and I would even suggest it as expected, that someone hearing a collapse, in the absense of visual cues, would describe it as an explosion.
Oddly enough, I've experienced the inverse: there are several times when an explosion ahs been heard by people who didn't have the visuals (distance listeners, for example), who thought it was a gunshot or a crash or some sort, rather than an explosion.
Take this for what you will, but thought I'd throw in a bit of info
I've had this argument in the past in 9/11 threads, when I was more active in this subforum.
First, a bit about me. I'm no expert, but I am a U.S. Army trained Combat Engineer. For those who don't know, the missions of a CE are mobility and counter-mobility: we create obsticles to block or slow the enemy, remove structures that help the enemy move, remove obsticles that the enemy may have placed, and build structures to help our troops move. These include things like ditches, berms, walls, bridges, tunnels, craters, and similar. As one might expect, explosives are involved in a large bit of this.
I've been trained in non-electric blasting techniques, both using det cord and MDI. I've also personally experienced explosions ranging from firecrackers and hand grenades, though several-hundred pound explosions of C-4, up to multiple-ton explosions to destroy ordnance.
That being said, the majority of people in the U.S. do NOT know what an explosion sounds like. They get their idea of what explosions are like from movies and TV, which almost unilaterally get it wrong. They expect the large fireball, and the drawn-out, loud rumbling sound lasting several seconds.
That is not what happens.
It's a very sharp and quick boom, and any rumbling there might be would be caused by echos (or multiple charges: structure demolitions usually use multiple charges seperated by time, to control the rate and direction of collapse, and produce a longer, more drawn out sound). Assuming a large enough explosion (or one you're close enough to), you get a push from the shockwave along with this. Usually little flame, mostly a dust cloud and a lot of debris. One of the early Mythbusters episodes, when they destroyed the cement truck, is an excellent example for reference.
The sound associated with the typical movie/TV explosion is much more like what one would expect from a collapse: the loud, long rumbling and shaking lasting several seconds.
It is not unreasonable, and I would even suggest it as expected, that someone hearing a collapse, in the absense of visual cues, would describe it as an explosion.
Oddly enough, I've experienced the inverse: there are several times when an explosion ahs been heard by people who didn't have the visuals (distance listeners, for example), who thought it was a gunshot or a crash or some sort, rather than an explosion.
Take this for what you will, but thought I'd throw in a bit of info
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