gun cotton उदाहरण वाक्य
उदाहरण वाक्य
- The tests were done using torpedoes with instrumented exercise heads : an electric eye would take an upward-looking picture from the torpedo; the magnetic influence feature would set off some gun cotton.
- Development that accompanied construction of a World War I gun cotton plant at nearby Peniman and the coming of the automobile blighted the community, but the town never lost its interest to tourists.
- Verne returned the dig later when he pointed out that he used gun cotton to send his men to the moon, an actual substance . " Can Mr . Wells show me some'cavourite'? ", he asked archly.
- Neave with a sergeant and a sapper, failed to blow the apparatus up with Gun cotton, but two French drivers abandoned and set on fire their tankers of aviation fuel and the resultant blaze destroyed the equipment successfully.
- Subsequently all the pontoons which could have been used again during the coming night were destroyed by firing two rounds from a torpedo boat's 3-pdr gun into each pontoon and two missed were holed by gun cotton charges.
- According to the Maritime Museum of the Atlantic on this web page, the Halifax Explosion involved 2, 300 tons of wet and dry picric acid, 200 tons of TNT, 10 tons of gun cotton, and 35 tons of benzol.
- The patent rights for the manufacture of gun cotton were obtained by John Hall & Son in 1846, and industrial manufacture of the explosive began at a purpose-built factory at Faversham s Marsh Works in Kent, England a year later.
- The next man of both teams then wired the gun cotton to the rail and walked on to the next prepared rail, while the third man put into the gun cotton the detonator and fuse and the fourth man lit the charge.
- The next man of both teams then wired the gun cotton to the rail and walked on to the next prepared rail, while the third man put into the gun cotton the detonator and fuse and the fourth man lit the charge.
- In 1863 64 and again in 1866 68 he served on the Council of the Royal Society, and having been a member of the Royal Commission on Lighthouses, Buoys, and Beacons from 1859 to 1862, he became a member of the Gun Cotton Committee in 1864 68.