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Pipe bombs 

A trip-wire triggered pipe bomb mock-up used to train US military service personnel.
A trip-wire triggered pipe bomb mock-up used to train US military service personnel.

A pipe bomb is an improvised explosive device, a tightly sealed section of pipe filled with an explosive material. The containment provided by the pipe means that simple low explosives can be used to produce a relatively large explosion, and the fragmentation of the pipe itself creates potentially lethal shrapnel.

Premature detonation is a hazard of attempting to construct any homemade bomb, and the materials and methods used with pipe bombs make unintentional detonation incidents common, usually resulting in serious injury or death to the assembler.

In many countries the manufacture or possession of a pipe bomb is a serious crime, regardless of its intended use.

Contents

Design

Different pipe bombs appearances, from a bomb awareness report issued by the US Department of State.
Different pipe bombs appearances, from a bomb awareness report issued by the US Department of State.

The bomb is usually a short section of steel water pipe containing the explosive mixture and closed at both ends with steel or brass caps. A fuse is inserted into the pipe with a lead running out through a hole in the side or capped end of the pipe. The fuse can be electric with wires leading to a timer and battery or can be a common fuse such as used in most consumer fireworks. All of the components are easily obtainable.

Generally high explosives such as TNT are not used, because these and the detonators they require are difficult to obtain. Such explosives also don't require the containment of a pipe bomb. Instead, any sort of explosive mixture the builder can find or make is used.

Some of the explosive mixtures used, such as black powder, match heads or chlorate mixtures are very prone to ignition by the friction and static electricity generated when packing the material inside the tube or attaching the end caps - accounting for many injuries or deaths amongst builders. If sharp objects, such as nails or broken glass, are added inside the bomb in an attempt to increase the amount of injury, these also add to the risk of premature ignition.

The addition of loosely fixed shrapnel material outside of the bomb can increase the danger of the explosion cheaply and easily. The Unabomber used this method by taping carpentry nails to the outside of his devices. Other variations include using scrap metal or ball bearings.

Devices made from plastic pipe, such as PVC, or thick walled cardboard tube would not be normally considered as "pipe bombs".

Uses

Pipe bombs are often used by criminals, as well as paramilitaries and militias. They also have a long tradition of recreational use for amusement or mischief with no intention to cause injury to anyone - but the dangers of premature ignition, and the inherent danger of shrapnel mean that when used in such a manner they are much more dangerous than alternatives such as dry ice bomb or spud gun.

This 1886 engraving was the most widely reproduced image of the Haymarket riots. It inaccurately shows Fielden speaking, the pipe bomb exploding, and the rioting beginning simultaneously.
This 1886 engraving was the most widely reproduced image of the Haymarket riots. It inaccurately shows Fielden speaking, the pipe bomb exploding, and the rioting beginning simultaneously.[1]
  • On 4 May 1886, a gas-pipe bomb was thrown during a rally at Haymarket Square in Chicago, Illinois.[2] The gas-pipe bomb reached a police line and exploded, killing policeman Mathias J. Degan.[2] The thrown bomb was made from gas-pipe filled with dynamite and capped at both ends with wooden blocks.[2] Old nails were secured tightly by wire around the gas-pipe, which had a hole that received a fuse with a cap.[2] The event became known as the infamous Haymarket riots.
  • On August 10, 2006 four pipe bombs were found in and around the city of Salem, Oregon, and some suspected a serial pipe bomber was at fault. First, a bomb was found attached to a car in the parking garage of Salem Hospital. Then one was located in the parking lot of a 'Roth's IGA' grocery store. Another was found attached to a car in a parking lot in Dallas, Oregon, and another found alongside a Salem roadway. The Salem Police Bomb Squad detonated the bomb outside the 'Roth's' and rendered the rest of the devices safe. The known victims were all residents of south Salem, and a suspect is facing trial.[12][13]
  • On September 12, 2006 after an attack by militants on the US embassy in Damascus, Syria, a van was recovered, full of conventional pipe bombs strapped to small common household Liquefied Petroleum Gas canisters. The attackers appeared to have failed to detonate the bombs; however another smaller vehicle did explode outside the embassy during the late morning surprise attack. [1] [2]
  • On October 23, 2006 a university student was detained after saying he had planted two pipe bombs outside the U.S. Embassy in Caracas, Venezuela. One bomb was placed outside an adjacent school, while another was found in a planter 50 feet from the Embassy's entrance. The bombs were designed to scatter pamphlets alluding to the Lebanese guerrilla group Hezbollah. Police evacuated the area and detonated the bombs. No one was injured.[14]

In popular culture

In the film, Tremors, Burt Gummer, played by Michael Gross, makes home-made pipe bombs to drive the noise-sensitive graboids away.

In the film The Terminator Sarah and Kyle use pipe bombs to fight the terminator.

In Backyard Wrestling promotion X-treme Bone Crushin' Wrestling, a pipe bomb was used in a deathmatch, for a finish.

In the computer game Duke Nukem 3D, remote-detonated pipe bombs are a weapon available for the player to use.

References

  1. ^ "Act II: Let Your Tragedy Be Enacted Here, Moment of Truth". The Dramas of Haymarket. Chicago Historical Society (2000). Retrieved on 2008-01-19. "The details are factually incorrect, because by all accounts Fielden ended his speech before the bomb was thrown, and because the riot did not begin until after the explosion. In [this] depiction, the speech, the explosion, and the riot all take place at once."
  2. ^ a b c d Lawson, John Davison; Robert Lorenzo Howard (1919). American State Trials: A Collection of the Important and Interesting Criminal Trials which Have Taken Place in the United States from the Beginning of Our Government to the Present Day. Thomas Law Books, 64. 
  3. ^ "Urban Legends Reference Pages: Death by Playing Cards", Snopes.com (January 19, 2007). 
  4. ^ "Rudolph reveals motives", CNN.com (April 19, 2005). 
  5. ^ "Columbine Massacre", About.com (August 24, 2006). 
  6. ^ http://cain.ulst.ac.uk/sutton/chron/2001
  7. ^ http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/northern_ireland/1652886.stm
  8. ^ http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qn4158/is_20020105/ai_n9670628
  9. ^ http://cain.ulst.ac.uk/issues/violence/deaths2002draft.htm
  10. ^ "Palestinian boy caught with bombs", Ynetnews (May 23, 2005). 
  11. ^ "Pipe Bomb attacks on North Antrim Catholics", Sinn Féin's Peace Process Special (August 8, 2005). 
  12. ^ "Pipe Bombs Found in The Salem Area", Salem-News.com (August 13, 2006). 
  13. ^ "Salem Pipe Bomb Suspect Back in Court Tuesday", Salem-News.com (February 13, 2007). 
  14. ^ Fernando Llano (October 23, 2006). "Venezuelan detained near U.S. embassy", Associated Press. 
  • US5,386,758  – Apparatus and method for disarming pipe bombs
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