
Red Smoke
#1
Posted 06 April 2008 - 02:48 AM
#2
Posted 06 April 2008 - 03:31 AM
Edited by rocket, 06 April 2008 - 03:32 AM.
#3
Posted 06 April 2008 - 05:09 AM
#4
Posted 06 April 2008 - 07:28 AM
Colored smokes, pyrotechnic compositions which
contain colored substances capable of being sublimed without an
undue amount of decomposition. The substances are volatilized
by the heat of the burning compositions to form colored vapors
which quickly condense to form clouds of finely divided colored
dust. Colored smokes are used for military signaling, and recently
have found use in colored moving pictures. Red smokes, for example,
were used in the "Wizard of Oz." Colored smoke compositions
are commonly rammed lightly, not packed firmly, in cases,
say 1 inch in internal diameter and 4 inches long, both ends of
which are closed with plugs of clay or wood. Holes, y± inch in
diameter, are bored through the case at intervals on a spiral line
around it; the topmost hole penetrates well into the composition
and is filled with starting fire material into which a piece of
black match, held in place by meal powder paste, is inserted.
According to Faber,57 the following-listed compositions were used
in American airplane smoke-signal grenades during the first
World War.
.
SMOKES p123 COPAE
..............................red
Potassium chlorate.....1
Lactose.....................1
Paranitraniline red......3
for other colours
Auramine --yellow
Chrysoidine --green
Indigo ---- blue
are used
Smokes by their nature STAIN they stain cloth, clothes, concrete, paint, wood, earth, grass -everything.
Somewhere on here is the supplier of smoke colours that is used by many major users, for aerobatic smokes etc. Search til you find them.
Buy yourself a decent text book.
Do not confuse colour in smokes with colour in flames the chemical mechanisms are TOTALLY different.
Edited by Arthur Brown, 06 April 2008 - 07:29 AM.
Keep mannequins and watermelons away from fireworks..they always get hurt..
#5
Posted 06 April 2008 - 07:32 AM
Well is there any place I can obtain potassium chlorate locally (like used for a fertilizer or something)?
#6
Posted 07 April 2008 - 07:50 AM
#7
Posted 08 April 2008 - 12:03 AM
Edited by six-five-two, 08 April 2008 - 12:04 AM.
#8
Posted 08 April 2008 - 06:50 AM
Okay then. So you're thinking that the KNO3/Sucrose mixture is too hot that it just doesn't work? If so, then what can I add to make it burn at a lower temperture?
pretty much nothing. Use a different sugar, lactose is used in a formula above
#9
Posted 08 April 2008 - 10:27 AM
#10
Posted 08 April 2008 - 11:17 AM
Would it not be posible to use a composition that produces little flame but lots of gas, then mix in say, finely powdered colored chalk. The idea been the gas generated aerosols the powdered chalk. I know guardian (spelling) nitrate is a good gas producer.
Edited by portfire, 08 April 2008 - 11:24 AM.
#11
Posted 08 April 2008 - 12:56 PM
Guanidine nitrate
Stability
May explode if heated. May be shock sensitive.
Toxicology
Toxic if inhaled, swallowed or absorbed through the skin.
#12
Posted 08 April 2008 - 01:45 PM
While the concept sounds good I think it may be unsuitable, also, chalk dust would probably settle very quickly. I'd say this idea calls for a solution such as an air cannon, or like a fireball, except relace your creamer/napthalene/lycopodium with chalk?
Guanidine nitrate
Stability
May explode if heated. May be shock sensitive.
Toxicology
Toxic if inhaled, swallowed or absorbed through the skin.
I see where your coming from. Guanidine nitrate is out of the question then..
Yeah, the air cannon is probibly the better option, which is one of my future projects, so will try this. I have a tub of blue chalk for string lines, should look cool.
#13
Posted 08 April 2008 - 05:52 PM
#14
Posted 08 April 2008 - 06:17 PM
Research this forum and the whole www for a supplier of dyes for coloured smoke. Look through all the known texts for formulae that you can use, then buy the chemicals needed.
Pyro doesnt go as plan if you make unplanned substitutions in the formulae. They may malfunction more or less violently than you planned.
Keep mannequins and watermelons away from fireworks..they always get hurt..
#15
Posted 09 April 2008 - 12:37 AM
Mumbles, will powdered acrylic paint work with just Potassium Nitrate and Sugar? Or will I have to use lactose or something isntead?
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