Dynamite ingredients include nitroglycerin, diatomaceous earth and tubes--usually waxed paper tubes--to hold the explosive. The nitro must be made at the dynamite factory; it's illegal to ship it as it's so dangerous. Diatomaceous earth is easy--you can get that at a swimming pool store because they use it in pool filters. You would probably make your own tubes; the kind of tube you need for dynamite isn't a stock item. So...the answer is you make most of it.
The most important ingredient of dynamite is nitroglycerin.
The consequences for dynamite is death; especially if you don`t know what and how to use it.
Dynamite is not illegal but the use is permitted only for authorized applications and with skilled operators.
Yes.
Yes. Nitrogen is in dynamite. The explosive ingredient in dynamite is Nitroglycerine. The glycerine molecule comes from fat, either vegetable or animal. It makes jello jell. When a nitric oxide molecule is added, it becomes nitroglycerine. It can be used as an explosive or a heart medicine. To turn nitroglycerine into dynamite, the nitroglycerine is mixed with clay and a few other chemicals.
True Enough- Peanut oil can be processed to produce glycerol, which can be used to make nitroglycerin, one of the constituents of dynamite. However, there are other processes that can be used to make dynamite without using peanuts at all.
b
In the simplest sense, dynamite is diatomaceous earth soaked with nitroglycerine, until it looks like wet brown sugar. It is packed into waxed red cardboard tubes, sealed, and labeled as to what it is - that's dynamite.
yes you do use dynamite
-The dynamite exploded in the building -Dynamite is very dangerous. -Dynamite is used in war.
Yes, it is true that dynamite that is unfused near a fuesed dynamite stick can "explode" due to the combustion of the other stick of dynamite "going off:. Yes, it is true that dynamite that is unfused near a fuesed dynamite stick can "explode" due to the combustion of the other stick of dynamite "going off:.
Miss dynamite is a rapper, most acclaimed for her release 'miss dynamite'.
George Letrell Dynamite goes by Dynamite.
You put the dynamite by the rocks after you have a line of gas by the rocks. Then you push the dynamite toward the rock and you turn on the elevator. After that your dynamite blows up the rocks.
As a noun, there are no antonyms for the word dynamite. As an adjective, some antonyms for dynamite are dull or uninteresting.
The principal component of dynamite is nitroglycerin.
The correct spelling is 'dynamite'.