Squibs
#1
Posted 05 July 2004 - 07:49 AM
Are homemade squibs safe?
How do you effectively make a homemade squib?
What type of powder is needed for the charge?
Should I weaken the clothing where the squib will shoot through?
How thick should the metal plate be?
What are some major dangers in making squibs?
And any information on the electrical charge, circuit firing, all the stuff that goes along with that would be just great.
#2
Posted 05 July 2004 - 08:40 AM
Home-made squibs are NOT safe. The dangers should seem obvious - you are working with explosives, and you are working in very close proximety to people, which isn't good especially where explosives are concerned.Are homemade squibs safe?
How do you effectively make a homemade squib?
What type of powder is needed for the charge?
Should I weaken the clothing where the squib will shoot through?
How thick should the metal plate be?
What are some major dangers in making squibs?
And any information on the electrical charge, circuit firing, all the stuff that goes along with that would be just great.
I would assume that making a squib would be extremely simple - just some low-explosive in a casing designed to reduce schrapnel.
What kind of effect are you looking for? - surely you don't want the explosion to show on film, unless you're looking for a metallic ricochet effect. If you're looking for a blood splatter, why use explosives atall?
Personally, I wouldn't take the risk of attaching explosives to my friends untill I had at least a little formal experience in the special effects business. You don't want to go blowing little chunks off people
#3
Posted 05 July 2004 - 03:54 PM
#4
Posted 05 July 2004 - 05:46 PM
#5
Posted 06 July 2004 - 01:26 PM
Look under the "compressed gas bloodsplatter" section. It also details why explosive squibs should never be used by non-professionals.
Edited by Creepin_pyro, 06 July 2004 - 01:28 PM.
#6
Posted 07 July 2004 - 06:56 PM
#7
Posted 07 July 2004 - 07:13 PM
Combining a processed "clap", along with a generic "splatter" sound made that headshot scene oh-so-gruesome.
Also of interest - the amount of visual effect you get by having so little [1/25th second] red fluid flying across the field-of-view.
#8
Posted 10 July 2004 - 09:46 AM
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