Editing
Incendiary Weapons
(section)
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Warning:
You are not logged in. Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits. If you
log in
or
create an account
, your edits will be attributed to your username, along with other benefits.
Anti-spam check. Do
not
fill this in!
==Types of incendiary weapons== ===Burning brands=== Obviously, the use of fire predates history itself. [[Stone Age|It is possible early apes that were not yet humans were throwing burning sticks at prey and each other]]. That may sound outlandish but we point at fire hawks, a group of hawks that carry burning sticks from one wildfire, to start another to flush out prey. There are a few theories that cooking food may have been the evolutionary jump-start to our intelligence so we were cooking and burning for a long, long time. The earliest sign we know for sure as being from a human-controlled fire goes back almost 300 to 400 thousand years ago. The first flaming weapons, therefore, were also simple, just burning sticks. It may sound unimpressive but to any kind of animal predator, a torch is an easy and effective way to push them back. Additionally, for much of human history, [[Not as planned|cities were made of wood]] and firefighting at best consisted of bucket chains. A relatively small band of arsonists could destroy even a reasonably sized settlement by indiscriminately throwing burning torches and moving quickly. It is such a burnt in our mental image that the idea of a "medieval raider" often has that burning torch in hand, on horseback. It is such a common tactic that there are literally too many examples in history to mention. From the Greeks to Scots to the English against the Scots and French, to the Mongols, literally burning an enemy land to deny the resources, shelter, and food it might offer, both offensively and even defensively in a "scorched earth campaign", is the most ancient military tactic: it literally predates the creation of steel! ===Fire Bombs=== Burning brands are an effective means of burning objects but people are fairly fire-resistant. Humans are roughly 60% water by mass which means just being hit with a burning stick will hurt but not set you on fire. Even a blow torch would not be enough. Oh ya, it hurt like hell but it alone will likely not be enough to set you on fire like a log. As such if you want to use incendiary weapons against infantry you have to get a bit creative. Hence the fire bomb, or rather the "Firepot", fire bomb is more a modern term. At its most simple, you have something like a ceramic jug full of lamp oil with a burning wick. In the middle ages, these were often used against enemy buildings and camps but were relatively rarely used by hand. In medieval battles, they were less effective as they are environmentally sensitive, pricey, had limited range and were generally unreliable at the best of times. However, as we said ''Handheld Versions are relatively rare'', Siege versions are a whole different story. Often called "''carcasses''", siege weapons hurling firepots, pitch, tar, or even woven projectiles of straw set alight would be a nightmare against a wooden city or in defending a city from a naval attack. Castles are made of stone but they have enough wooden timbers in that that if you hurl enough fire at them even they will burn since you only need to get lucky once to end them. ===Flamethrowers=== {{Topquote|I know of very few instances in which the word "'''flamethrower'''" could not be preceded by the word "'''fuckin''''".|[[Recommended Web Video Channels|Zero Punctuation]] on ''Alone in the Dark: Illumination''}} [[File:Greekfire-madridskylitzes1.jpg|thumb|right|450px|The legendary [[LosTech|Greek fire]]]] As soon as we started burning each other, everyone asked the next question ''"this is great, but how can we burn people to death at a distance?"'' The answer is that horrifying question is: The Flamethrower. The basic mechanisms of a Flamethrower are pretty simple. All you need is a cistern for fuel, a pump, a nozzle, and a pilot light. It's not hard to figure out so long as you have the technology for pumps and access to some kind of Oil. As such there are various interment examples of their use throughout history. The earliest example this editor could find would be in the battle of Delium in 424 BC where the attacking Boeotians tried to some kind of flamethrower against the Athenian defenders. The first perhaps widespread use of flame throwers though goes to the Byzantines and their "Greek Fire". Greek Fire is sometimes considered 'the first secret weapon' and alongside Roman concrete is one of the earliest trope setters for 'unknown lost technology' that 40k takes and runs with. In any case, Greek Fire was a very effective weapon and although land-based uses are recorded, as you can imagine in an era of wooden ships (with the cistern and pump being heavy) it was a dangerous weapon on water. As stated we still don't know quite what Greek fire was, though we have a few ideas. It alongside most early (and modern) flamethrowers likely used some sort of petroleum-derived compound, but if you do a quick eyeball of Byzantine territory in the time Greek Fire was supposedly introduced, not a lot of natural oil fields were left especially easy to get stuff so the jury is still out. Others have suspected some kind of quicklime-based solution as well, Roman records mention mulberry resin often serving as a substitute for the petroleum, agitated by a small amount of quicklime (explaining old records of Greek fire being ''ignited'' by water) and sulfur. Meanwhile, in Asia, the forces of the Song Dynasty also built flamethrowers, multiple types in fact. It's generally understood (read: stolen from wiki) that the Chinese of this time period were were given tributes of petroleum from Vietnam. Called "měng huǒ yóu" in Chinese which translates to "fierce-fire oil" which gave the Chinese fire weapons their heat. There was also some evidence of [https://csegrecorder.com/articles/view/ancient-chinese-drilling Oil Drilling in China itself during the Northern Song Dynasty]. One such flamethrower is recorded in the "Wujing Zongyao", a military guide written around 1040-1044. And of course, any discussion of pre-modern incendiary would be incomplete without mentioning: '''Naphtha'''. Naphtha is just a type of petroleum known since ancient times. Nowadays it's pretty broadly used as a name for crude oil or even more refined items like kerosene. But while Naphtha is a bit boring since it's ''just'' petroleum, it's still a name that shows up in both history and fantasy so it's worth going over quickly what it is: just read "crude oil" and you won't be too far wrong. Even so, it was in the 20th century that Flamethrowers really came into their own as man-portable units. It started with the Germans who worked out that they could be used to clear out trenches and soon enough everyone was using them. In WW2 these were supplemented by [[Awesome|Flame Tanks]], like the German [[Panzer III|Flammpanzer III]] or the Churchill Crocodile. ===White Phosphorus and Other Potential Warcrime-Enabling Substances=== For when you want to burn everything in a 20-meter radius, almost nothing beats White Phosphorus, aka Willie Pete. This stuff is the most potent incendiary commonly available, to the point that its use in artillery has rendered flamethrowers militarily obsolescent. Then there's napalm, which is just gasoline mixed with a thickening agent such that it's useful in an incendiary bomb. The thickening agent means that the gasoline sticks to whatever it hits, which has some obvious benefits for firebombing, to the point that "hit them with napalm" has become almost synonymous with "firebomb them" in modern warfare. The most notable inflammatory substance, besides WP, napalm, and naphtha, is chlorine trifluoride, ClF<sub>3</sub>. Most notable, here, because it's so potent that it's a better oxidizer than Oxygen and more difficult to handle than Fluorine gas, which puts it in fairly rarified circles. It will burn things that you previously assumed wouldn't burn, like sand, asbestos, bricks, concrete, and even Carbon Dioxide. It will react violently anything, to the point that no delay in reaction with any substance has ever been measured; this includes the raw metals used to store it, and only a thin oxidation layer that forms on any metal exposed to it allows it to be stored even somewhat "safely" (for very dubious values of "safety" since that layer breaks down rapidly when heated). To give you some idea: It's considered too volatile for use as rocket fuel, and those people love their volitiles. Note that it's very unsafe nature means that it only gets brought up as an incendiary<ref>The stuff sees commercial use in cleaning surfaces for semiconductor manufacturing; if you wondered why semiconductor plants are so expensive, the fact that they ''actually need'' stuff like ClF3 (which, again, '''burns Carbon Dioxide''') should give you some idea of just how hard it is to make advanced chips.</ref> in hypothetical situations, such as "what's the most damage you could do with magical alchemy in the real world?". <ref> Well, that and it's meaner, uglier cousin, CFl'''5'''. But unlike CFl3, that chemical has only been studied in laboratories, as even the crazy people will see the problems with CFl3 and say "nope nope nope" to anything using CFl5, and as such is somewhat obscure.</ref>
Summary:
Please note that all contributions to 2d4chan may be edited, altered, or removed by other contributors. If you do not want your writing to be edited mercilessly, then do not submit it here.
You are also promising us that you wrote this yourself, or copied it from a public domain or similar free resource (see
2d4chan:Copyrights
for details).
Do not submit copyrighted work without permission!
Cancel
Editing help
(opens in new window)
Navigation menu
Personal tools
Not logged in
Talk
Contributions
Create account
Log in
Namespaces
Page
Discussion
English
Views
Read
Edit
Edit source
View history
More
Search
Navigation
Main page
Recent changes
Random page
Help about MediaWiki
Tools
What links here
Related changes
Special pages
Page information