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Ruin peoples things

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(21 votes)
Published: Dec 20, 2004 11:13 p.m.
Viewed 180 times




There are many chemicals that can destroy stuff without blowing it up or burning it. One suprising thing I learned from a educational magazine (I don’t remeber which one) is the reason why you can’t take mercury on a plane is that the mercury will turn aluminum to dust in a couple hours. So when your target owns some massive or expensive aluminum item outside, pour some mercury on it and overnight it can turn it to dust. You can also do this to some AC units. Replacements of those can be up to a couple thousand.


Another interesting mix is Alkine Battery Acid. It corrodes most metals and direct contact is very safe unless you have like hyper sensitive hands or something.

You completely drain a 6 volt lantern battery and Have it sit near a window exposed to weather for a couple days. make sure the battery completely died. Mine took 6 years of gradual use, I purchased two back in 1998, it died during the summer. When you do get a dead one, open it and you should find 4 cylinders made of a certain metal. Open the clyinder anyway you can. don’t worry about it getting on your hands, it felt like damp dust, it dosen’t cause immediate change, you empty several of those cylinders (it should be this black caked-together powder, crush it and put it in a GLASS jar. I Made the mistake of putting it in a tin box and it ate the entire box in the 20 mins I was taking a bath.
You don’t have to mix anything else into it, you can either keep it dry and apply to most metal surcafes (exposed), layer about 1/2 inch, or make it a paste (not too liquidy) and coat the object with it.

This mix eats aluminum (not well), tin(like I said, it destoryed a box in 20mins), brass(about 30 mins), glass (etching), certain plastics(not well, just discoloration)and oddly, stainless steel forks (it causes rust). The only few materials completely unaffected is carbon, nickel, and zinc.
 

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Nov 12, 2005 8:07 am - cool
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