ita, I don't know about the bullets, but I do know there are sledgehammers that have an internal mercury compartment, for extra ooomph. IIRC, they're called deadblow hammers.
Simon ,'Objects In Space'
Natter 55: It's the 55th Natter
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
ita, I know that there are 'safe' rounds out there for use by bodyguards and the like, which are designed to not ricochet and not exit targets, but I don't think they use mercury. Mercury is considered a hazardous material and thus probably violates a half dozen domestic laws and international treaties when you use it in a rifle/pistol round. Not that clandestine military units are particularly well known for following the letter of the law, but in that case why make a specialized round when you can buy on the open market rounds that do the same thing cheaply and in large enough quantities that they can't be traced?
Can you make a bullet out of frozen mercury? Then once inside the victim it melts, destroying the evidence? (Except for all the mercury inside the victim.)
You know what'd be cool? A bullet made from sodium. Sodium is a metal that burns upon contact with water (or, you know, blood).
Can you make a bullet out of frozen mercury? Then once inside the victim it melts, destroying the evidence?
CSI had an episode where someone was shot with a bullet made of frozen ground meat.
Hee!
OK, what would be the most bizarre thing to make a bullet out of? How about a shotgun shell that's loaded with game pieces from Monopoly rather than shot? So on CSI they could show them removing a tiny metal wheelbarrow and a tiny metal dog from the victim....
Ooh. Or a guy who's allergic to peanuts could be shot with a bullet of frozen peanut butter.
Or a frat party gone horribly wrong where someone is shot with a jello shot....
CSI had an episode where someone was shot with a bullet made of frozen ground meat.
The Mythbusters tried that. It didn't work very well.
I saw the Mythbusters one with the bullets made of ice.
Mythbusters annoyed me when it took them so long to get the "frozen bird hits airplane window" thing right....
ita, I don't know about the bullets, but I do know there are sledgehammers that have an internal mercury compartment, for extra ooomph. IIRC, they're called deadblow hammers.
As I understand it, the purpose is not so much for ooomph as to reduce the chance the hammer will bounce and hit something you didn't intend to hit.
ita, I know that there are 'safe' rounds out there for use by bodyguards and the like, which are designed to not ricochet and not exit targets, but I don't think they use mercury.
One that's pretty common is the Glaser safety slug, which uses little lead pellets. [link]
You know what'd be cool? A bullet made from sodium. Sodium is a metal that burns upon contact with water (or, you know, blood).
Heh, in one D&D adventure I played in, the party was given a glass container with a large chunk of sodium suspended in a non-reactive liquid (though we weren't told it was that - it was a "magic" item). We were to use it if we ran into trouble with a water-based creature (and in fact did very successfully). I'm not sure if the science actually holds up, but it was cool in a geektastic sort of way.