please somebody give them the info so that they take themselves out of our misery, since obviously they will botch the job and will give us great pleasure with all the fireworks. -----Original Message----- From: Reeza! <howree@cable.navy.mil> To: Tim May <tcmay@got.net>; HOPPYF1215@aol.com <HOPPYF1215@aol.com>; cypherpunks@toad.com <cypherpunks@toad.com> Date: Wednesday, August 19, 1998 10:13 PM Subject: Re: Pipe
At 05:33 PM 8/19/98 -0700, Tim May wrote:
At 4:28 PM -0700 8/19/98, HOPPYF1215@aol.com wrote:
Send me info on how to make a pipe bomb. HoppyF1315
Hoppyhead,
You'll have to wait until we supply the other AOLholes with the information they demanded on thrash music, hacking banks info, LSD manufacturing, and get rich quick schemes.
We're struggling under the workload of millions of new AOL, PacBell, Earthlink, Prodigy, and other newbies who have just discovered the Net.
--Tim May
Don't forget all the requests for band stickers,,,,
Reeza1 "Nothing is impossible for the man who doesn't have to do it himself." --Weiler's Law
On Fri, 21 Aug 1998, Marc Maffei wrote:
please somebody give them the info so that they take themselves out of our misery, since obviously they will botch the job and will give us great pleasure with all the fireworks.
Send me info on how to make a pipe bomb. HoppyF1315
OK- THIS INFORMATION IS PROVIDED FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY! DO NOT TRY THIS AT HOME, UNLESS YOU KNOW WHAT YOU ARE DOING!!! BETTER YET, DO NOT ACTUALLY USE THESE INSTRUCTIONS, AND BE CAREFUL WHO YOU SHARE THEM WITH! IT IS MUCH SAFER IF YOU HAVE STUDIED THIS IN SCHOOL, AND ARE NOT A RANK AMATUER! Here's something you can make using basic household chemicals, in your kitchen. Be careful, or you'l make a real mess. You can make several seperate batches of this, and combine after cooled, but don't try making larger batches in one pass, as this can get out of hand quickly. (Sorry, but I don't have the metric conversions for this - you're on your own there, and this won't really live up to expectations if you use metric conversion, anyway ...) Carefully sift a pound of household flour, gradually combining with 1/2 teaspoon sodium chloride. Be sure that the mixture is uniform, without clumping. Aerate until smooth (in a non-reactive vessel, such as a PYREX bowl) a pound of emulsified milk fat, and gradually add 1 pound of granulated sucrose (available at the grocer's). Add the yolks from 10 eggs. Use a hand mixer to mix this, and get the mixture as "LITE" as possible. Sift the sifted flour/sodium chloride mixture in very slowly - MAKE SURE TO KEEP THE MIXTURE UNIFORM, AND DON'T ALLOW "LUMPS" TO FORM - IF YOU BEGIN TO SEE THIS, SLOW DOWN THE RATE AT WHICH YOU ARE ADDING THE BASE flour/Sodium Chloride MIX, AND STIR BETTER! Stir in a teaspoon of extract of vanilla (CAUTION, THIS CONTAINS ALCOHOL, WHICH IS FLAMMABLE!) and make sure to distribute evenly throughout the mixture. Add a 1/2 teaspoon of Citric Acid in an aqueous solution. Carefully add the egg whites, distributing evenly. Continue to stir this mixture until it starts to become stiff and hard to stir, but TAKE CARE THAT IT DOES NOT BEGIN TO BECOME DRY (stop mixing before it reaches this point!). Use butter or shortening to grease the inside of two bread loaf pans SO THAT THE MIXTURE DOES NOT STICK TO THE SIDES OF THE METAL PANS. Pour half of the mixture SLOWLY into each pan. Use an oven to "bake" this mixture - let the oven heat up to 300 degrees (farenheit), then put the pans in. You will need about 1.25 hours for the heat conversion to occur. Be sure NOT TO LEAVE THE PANS IN TOO LONG!!! If you see that the mixture is taking on a "DRY" LOOK, or is "SHRINKING" AWAY FROM THE SIDES OF THE PAN, CAREFULLY REMOVE AT ONCE!! MAKE SURE TO HANDLE THE PANS WITH PROTECTIVE GLOVES, AS THEY WILL BE HOT! YOU DON'T WANT TO DROP THIS ON THE FLOOR AT THIS POINT! Carefully set the pans down (slowly) where the heat from the pans will not cause damage, and where the pans can be LEFT UNDISTURBED for several hours. Allow the mixture to cool until the sides and the bottom of the pan are cool to the touch - at this moint, the mixture will be safe to handle. This should make enough to fill several pipes, depending on size. Be very careful when packing the mixture into the pipe, and make sure that you don't get any of the mixture into the pipe threads, as this can get very messy.
On Fri, 21 Aug 1998, Rabid Wombat wrote:
Send me info on how to make a pipe bomb. HoppyF1315
OK-
[snip recipe] Funny thing is, if this recipe was actually printed in the _Anarchist's Cookbook_, Bill Powell probably would have screwed it up to the point that it *would* blow somebody's arm off. -Caj
You forgot to slice it, and to add the garlic, and butter,,,,<heeeheee> At 06:37 AM 8/21/98 -0400, Rabid Wombat wrote:
On Fri, 21 Aug 1998, Marc Maffei wrote:
please somebody give them the info so that they take themselves out of our misery, since obviously they will botch the job and will give us great pleasure with all the fireworks.
Send me info on how to make a pipe bomb. HoppyF1315
OK-
THIS INFORMATION IS PROVIDED FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY! DO NOT TRY THIS AT HOME, UNLESS YOU KNOW WHAT YOU ARE DOING!!! BETTER YET, DO NOT ACTUALLY USE THESE INSTRUCTIONS, AND BE CAREFUL WHO YOU SHARE THEM WITH! IT IS MUCH SAFER IF YOU HAVE STUDIED THIS IN SCHOOL, AND ARE NOT A RANK AMATUER!
Here's something you can make using basic household chemicals, in your kitchen. Be careful, or you'l make a real mess. You can make several seperate batches of this, and combine after cooled, but don't try making larger batches in one pass, as this can get out of hand quickly. (Sorry, but I don't have the metric conversions for this - you're on your own there, and this won't really live up to expectations if you use metric conversion, anyway ...)
Carefully sift a pound of household flour, gradually combining with 1/2 teaspoon sodium chloride. Be sure that the mixture is uniform, without clumping. Aerate until smooth (in a non-reactive vessel, such as a PYREX bowl) a pound of emulsified milk fat, and gradually add 1 pound of granulated sucrose (available at the grocer's). Add the yolks from 10 eggs. Use a hand mixer to mix this, and get the mixture as "LITE" as possible. Sift the sifted flour/sodium chloride mixture in very slowly - MAKE SURE TO KEEP THE MIXTURE UNIFORM, AND DON'T ALLOW "LUMPS" TO FORM - IF YOU BEGIN TO SEE THIS, SLOW DOWN THE RATE AT WHICH YOU ARE ADDING THE BASE flour/Sodium Chloride MIX, AND STIR BETTER! Stir in a teaspoon of extract of vanilla (CAUTION, THIS CONTAINS ALCOHOL, WHICH IS FLAMMABLE!) and make sure to distribute evenly throughout the mixture. Add a 1/2 teaspoon of Citric Acid in an aqueous solution. Carefully add the egg whites, distributing evenly. Continue to stir this mixture until it starts to become stiff and hard to stir, but TAKE CARE THAT IT DOES NOT BEGIN TO BECOME DRY (stop mixing before it reaches this point!). Use butter or shortening to grease the inside of two bread loaf pans SO THAT THE MIXTURE DOES NOT STICK TO THE SIDES OF THE METAL PANS. Pour half of the mixture SLOWLY into each pan. Use an oven to "bake" this mixture - let the oven heat up to 300 degrees (farenheit), then put the pans in. You will need about 1.25 hours for the heat conversion to occur. Be sure NOT TO LEAVE THE PANS IN TOO LONG!!! If you see that the mixture is taking on a "DRY" LOOK, or is "SHRINKING" AWAY FROM THE SIDES OF THE PAN, CAREFULLY REMOVE AT ONCE!! MAKE SURE TO HANDLE THE PANS WITH PROTECTIVE GLOVES, AS THEY WILL BE HOT! YOU DON'T WANT TO DROP THIS ON THE FLOOR AT THIS POINT! Carefully set the pans down (slowly) where the heat from the pans will not cause damage, and where the pans can be LEFT UNDISTURBED for several hours. Allow the mixture to cool until the sides and the bottom of the pan are cool to the touch - at this moint, the mixture will be safe to handle.
This should make enough to fill several pipes, depending on size. Be very careful when packing the mixture into the pipe, and make sure that you don't get any of the mixture into the pipe threads, as this can get very messy.
"Nothing is impossible for the man who doesn't have to do it himself." --Weiler's Law
Eww, garlic in a sweetbread? I would say zucchini or carrots. *grin* On Mon, 24 Aug 1998, Reeza! wrote:
You forgot to slice it, and to add the garlic, and butter,,,,<heeeheee>
At 06:37 AM 8/21/98 -0400, Rabid Wombat wrote:
On Fri, 21 Aug 1998, Marc Maffei wrote:
please somebody give them the info so that they take themselves out of our misery, since obviously they will botch the job and will give us great pleasure with all the fireworks.
Send me info on how to make a pipe bomb. HoppyF1315
OK-
THIS INFORMATION IS PROVIDED FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY! DO NOT TRY THIS AT HOME, UNLESS YOU KNOW WHAT YOU ARE DOING!!! BETTER YET, DO NOT ACTUALLY USE THESE INSTRUCTIONS, AND BE CAREFUL WHO YOU SHARE THEM WITH! IT IS MUCH SAFER IF YOU HAVE STUDIED THIS IN SCHOOL, AND ARE NOT A RANK AMATUER!
Here's something you can make using basic household chemicals, in your kitchen. Be careful, or you'l make a real mess. You can make several seperate batches of this, and combine after cooled, but don't try making larger batches in one pass, as this can get out of hand quickly. (Sorry, but I don't have the metric conversions for this - you're on your own there, and this won't really live up to expectations if you use metric conversion, anyway ...)
Carefully sift a pound of household flour, gradually combining with 1/2 teaspoon sodium chloride. Be sure that the mixture is uniform, without clumping. Aerate until smooth (in a non-reactive vessel, such as a PYREX bowl) a pound of emulsified milk fat, and gradually add 1 pound of granulated sucrose (available at the grocer's). Add the yolks from 10 eggs. Use a hand mixer to mix this, and get the mixture as "LITE" as possible. Sift the sifted flour/sodium chloride mixture in very slowly - MAKE SURE TO KEEP THE MIXTURE UNIFORM, AND DON'T ALLOW "LUMPS" TO FORM - IF YOU BEGIN TO SEE THIS, SLOW DOWN THE RATE AT WHICH YOU ARE ADDING THE BASE flour/Sodium Chloride MIX, AND STIR BETTER! Stir in a teaspoon of extract of vanilla (CAUTION, THIS CONTAINS ALCOHOL, WHICH IS FLAMMABLE!) and make sure to distribute evenly throughout the mixture. Add a 1/2 teaspoon of Citric Acid in an aqueous solution. Carefully add the egg whites, distributing evenly. Continue to stir this mixture until it starts to become stiff and hard to stir, but TAKE CARE THAT IT DOES NOT BEGIN TO BECOME DRY (stop mixing before it reaches this point!). Use butter or shortening to grease the inside of two bread loaf pans SO THAT THE MIXTURE DOES NOT STICK TO THE SIDES OF THE METAL PANS. Pour half of the mixture SLOWLY into each pan. Use an oven to "bake" this mixture - let the oven heat up to 300 degrees (farenheit), then put the pans in. You will need about 1.25 hours for the heat conversion to occur. Be sure NOT TO LEAVE THE PANS IN TOO LONG!!! If you see that the mixture is taking on a "DRY" LOOK, or is "SHRINKING" AWAY FROM THE SIDES OF THE PAN, CAREFULLY REMOVE AT ONCE!! MAKE SURE TO HANDLE THE PANS WITH PROTECTIVE GLOVES, AS THEY WILL BE HOT! YOU DON'T WANT TO DROP THIS ON THE FLOOR AT THIS POINT! Carefully set the pans down (slowly) where the heat from the pans will not cause damage, and where the pans can be LEFT UNDISTURBED for several hours. Allow the mixture to cool until the sides and the bottom of the pan are cool to the touch - at this moint, the mixture will be safe to handle.
This should make enough to fill several pipes, depending on size. Be very careful when packing the mixture into the pipe, and make sure that you don't get any of the mixture into the pipe threads, as this can get very messy.
"Nothing is impossible for the man who doesn't have to do it himself." --Weiler's Law
participants (5)
-
Marc Maffei
-
Mark Hedges
-
Rabid Wombat
-
Reeza!
-
Xcott Craver