Theres a dead naked man in the middle of a field holding a straw. How did he die and how did he get there?
Feel free to post up any other riddles.
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Theres a dead naked man in the middle of a field holding a straw. How did he die and how did he get there?
Feel free to post up any other riddles.
he was in a hot air balloon and they had to ditch some weight so they took off their clothes and it wasnt enough so they then drew straws and he got the short one.
A cannon is just a metal tube with a closed end and an
open end. The closed end has a small fuse hole. To load the cannon, you
pour in gunpowder (a mixture of charcoal, sulfur and potassium
nitrate), and then drop in a cannonball. The gunpowder and cannonball
sit in the breech, the rear part of the bore (the open
space in the cannon). To prepare for a shot, you run a fuse (a length
of flammable material) through the hole so it reaches down to the
gunpowder. To fire the cannon, you light the fuse. The flame travels
along the fuse and finally reaches the gunpowder.
When you ignite gunpowder, it burns rapidly, producing a lot of hot gas in the process. The hot gas applies much greater pressure on the powder side of the cannonball than the air in the atmosphere applies on the other side. This propels the cannonball out of the gun at high speed.
The first handheld guns were essentially miniature cannons; you
loaded some gunpowder and a steel ball and lit a fuse. Eventually, this
technology gave way to trigger-activated weapons, such as the flintlock gun and the percussion cap.
Flintlock guns ignited gun powder by producing a tiny spark, while percussion caps used mercuric fulminate, an explosive compound you could ignite with a sharp blow. To load a percussion-cap gun, you poured gunpowder into the breech, stuffed a ball in on top of it, and placed a mercuric fulminate cap on top of a small nipple. To fire the gun, you cocked a hammer all the way back and pulled the gun's trigger. The trigger released the hammer, which swung forward onto the explosive cap. The cap ignited, shooting a small flame down a tube to the gunpowder. The gunpowder exploded, launching the ball out of the barrel. (Check out How Flintlock Guns Work for more information on these weapons.)
In the 1800s, the percussion-cap gun slowly gave way to the revolver,
which only had to be reloaded every five or six shots instead of after
each shot. In the next section, we'll see how this system works.
The first revolvers used gunpowder, balls and caps like the earlier
percussion-cap pistols. The shooter would load each of the six chambers
in the cylinder with gunpowder and a projectile, and place separate
percussion caps on corresponding nipples. While the loading procedure
was tedious, a shooter could have six rounds fully prepared ahead of
time.
In the 1870s, these models were replaced by revolvers that used bullet cartridges
instead of gunpowder and caps. Cartridges are a combination of a
projectile (the bullet), a propellant (gunpowder, for example) and a
primer (the explosive cap), all contained in one metal package.
In a modern revolver, cartridges are loaded into six chambers, each of which can be positioned in front of the gun's barrel. A spring-loaded hammer is positioned on the other side of the cylinder, in line with the barrel. The basic idea of the gun is to cock the hammer back, line up a new cartridge in between the hammer and the barrel and then release the hammer by pulling a trigger. The spring throws the hammer forward so it hits the primer. The primer explodes, igniting the propellant, which drives the bullet down the barrel.
The inside of the barrel is lined with spiraling grooves, which spin the bullet to give it stability. A longer barrel improves stability, since it spins the bullet for longer. Extending the barrel also increases the speed of the bullet, since the gas pressure accelerates the bullet for a longer period of time.
In early revolvers, a shooter had to pull the hammer back before each shot and then pull the trigger to release the hammer. In modern revolvers, simply pulling the trigger will force the hammer backward and then release it.
You can see how a modern revolver works in the diagram below.
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The sequence of events in each shot is very simple:
In double-action revolvers, the shooter can either pull the trigger to cock and fire or pull the hammer back ahead of time. The advantage of cocking the hammer first is that the trigger moves more easily when it is time to fire.
Obviously, a revolver is easier to use than a flintlock or a percussion-cap weapon. A shooter can load six shots at a time and only needs to pull the trigger to fire. But revolvers seem very limited next to newer technologies: The shooter must pull the trigger for every shot and stop to reload regularly. On the battlefield, the revolver can't possibly stand up to modern automatic weapons.
To Bear Arms To learn about the gun laws in your area, as well as pending legislation, check out Gun Laws, Gun Control & Gun Rights.
For more information on revolvers and other weapons, check out the links on the next page