106 lines
4.5 KiB
Plaintext
106 lines
4.5 KiB
Plaintext
\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\
|
||
\\ THE STILL \\
|
||
\\ BY: COBALT-60 AND \\
|
||
\\ AIRBORNE RANGER \\
|
||
\\ FROM "THE POOR MAN'S JAMES BOND" \\
|
||
\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\
|
||
|
||
DIAGRAM:
|
||
|
||
RUBBER ________________________
|
||
TUBING --! !
|
||
! _____!______
|
||
_!_ \ /
|
||
\ / \ / RUBBER TUBING TO OUTSIDE>>>>
|
||
PYREX ! ! \ /___________!______ _______
|
||
FLASK-- ! ! \____/ _!_!_
|
||
/ \ / \___/
|
||
/ \ BUCKET W/WATER AND ICE / \
|
||
__(_______)__ & RUBBER TUBE COILED INSIDE ! !
|
||
! _______ ! AND OUT THROUGH A HOLE NEAR ! !
|
||
! ! ! ! THE BOTTOM !_____!
|
||
! ! ^^^ ! !
|
||
! ! ! ! ! ! --TIN CAN STAND
|
||
! ! / \ ! !
|
||
! !! AB ! ! !
|
||
!
|
||
--------- ALCOHOL BURNER
|
||
|
||
Once the Militant has his chemicals, he sets up his still. It is small,
|
||
efficent and safe. In it he makes things like tear gas, prussic acid and
|
||
occasionally distills alcohol.
|
||
|
||
First, a flask is fitted with a one-hole rubber stopper. A short length of
|
||
thin glass tubing is inserted into the hole. A five foot length of thin rubber
|
||
tubing is fitted over the glass tube and coiled into the ice bucket and out
|
||
through a hole in the bottom. The end of the tube is fitted over another glass
|
||
tube which is in a two-hole stopper stuck into a bottle. The other hole
|
||
contains another glass tube to which is attachedanother length of tubing which
|
||
is long enough to reach outside to get rid of any noxious or poisonous fumes.
|
||
|
||
The equipment for the still is cheap and simple to get. Most of it can be
|
||
bought from your local drug store. They carry tubing, stoppers, glass- ware
|
||
and many chemicals which they sell freely to doctors, students, etc. if you
|
||
get on good terms with your druggist, and he doesn't know you're a freak, you
|
||
can buy most of your stuff from him.
|
||
|
||
A ring stand or tripod for the flask is more handy than the can in the
|
||
diagram (Above^). But a tin can with slits cut in it for ventilation and the
|
||
removal of the burner is usually adequate.
|
||
|
||
The checklist of equipment is:
|
||
|
||
[1] ALCOHOL LAMP.
|
||
[2] RING STAND, TRIPOD, OR TIN CAN.
|
||
[3] 500 ML OR LARGER FLASK (PYREX).
|
||
[4] ASSORTMENT OF ONE AND TWO-HOLE AND HOLELESS STOPPERS OF VARIOUS SIZES.
|
||
[5] ABOUT SIX YARDS OF 3/16" (INTERNAL DIAMETER) RUBBER TUBING.
|
||
[6] ABOUT A FOOT OF SIX MILLIMETER (EXTERNAL DIAMETER) LABORATORY GLASS TUBING.
|
||
[7] CHILD'S PLASTIC BUCKET.
|
||
[8] RECIEVING BOTTLE.
|
||
|
||
The hole in the bucket is made slightly smaller so the tube will fit snugly
|
||
and prevent leakage.
|
||
|
||
Full strength wood alcohol for the lamp can be bought at the drug store.
|
||
Rubbing alcohol, although 30% water will burn in the lamp, but not so well.
|
||
You can distill the pure alcohol off the water from rubbing alcohol.
|
||
|
||
This is best done over a gas or electric stove. First a large with a ouple
|
||
inches of water in it is put on the burner while the others are turned off.
|
||
|
||
The still is set up as in the illustration except the recieving bottle is
|
||
larger and doesn't need a tube going outside (For distilling alcohol). The
|
||
flask is filledwith rubbing alcohol to just under the neck and set in the pan
|
||
of boiling water.
|
||
|
||
In this setup a coathanger wire with a loop in it's middle is put over the
|
||
neck of the flask, and secured to the sides of the pan. The reason for this
|
||
being that as the alcohol evaporates, the flask gets lighter and lighter until
|
||
it rises in the water and topples over, shattering.
|
||
|
||
Another consideration is to make shure the tube does not flop over and
|
||
collapse. This can be prevented by hanging a string from the ceiling by which
|
||
the the tubing is held above the flask.
|
||
|
||
The tubing should be further supported so that it does not touch the hot edge
|
||
of the pan and melt.
|
||
|
||
When the action starts the alcohol will fairly flow into the collecting
|
||
bottle. WHen it stops, all that is left in the flask is water. If this were
|
||
left alone, water would start dripping, much slower than alcohol, but this is
|
||
not wanted.
|
||
|
||
This is the only case where you should distill over a stove. A stove is
|
||
Harder to control than an alcohol lamp. It is also harder to clean up than a
|
||
table in case of an accident.
|
||
|
||
Later on, look for more soon!
|
||
|
||
______
|
||
/ \ /\
|
||
| / \
|
||
| O B A L T - 6 0 & /----\ I R B O R N E
|
||
| / \
|
||
\______/ / \ R A N G E R
|
||
|