The fastest projectiles in human history

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Suck My Glock

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The fastest manmade object isn't a hypersonic jet or spacecraft, but a large manhole cover....

When the US started doing underground nuclear testing, nobody really knew what would happen. One test bomb was placed at the bottom of a 485-foot deep shaft on July 26, 1957, and someone thought it was a good idea to put a half-ton iron manhole cover on top to contain the explosion. The bomb turned the shaft into the world's largest Roman candle, and the manhole cover was nowhere to be found.

Robert Brownlee, an astrophysicist who designed the test, wanted to repeat the experiment with high-speed cameras so he could figure out what happened to the cover. So another experiment was created, this time 500-feet deep, and a similar half-ton manhole cover was placed on top. On August 27, 1957, they detonated the bomb. The high-speed cameras barely caught a view of the cover as it left the top of the shaft and headed into oblivion. Brownlee used the frames to calculate the speed to be more than 125,000 miles per hour.... more than five times the escape velocity of the Earth, and the fastest man-made object in history.


Physicists have debated the whereabouts of the two manhole covers ever since. Recently, with the help of supercomputers and a lot more scientific knowledge, physicists are certain that they wouldn't have had time to burn up completely before exiting the atmosphere. This means both of the remaining pieces would have passed Pluto's orbit sometime around 1961 and are way beyond the edge of the solar system by now.
 
Oh great. Now hundreds of shooters are headed to the reloading room, muttering "Hold my beer."
 
Pretty dang fast!.
Voyager 1 is trucking along at 17 Km per second or about 38,000 mph.
 
The big question is how many Democrats we could have put in that shaft and still achieved escape velocity
 
I hope there was more to the experiment than calculating the velocity of a manhole cover!
 
Cbvanb said:
I hope there was more to the experiment than calculating the velocity of a manhole cover!
We can almost be sure there was.. but probably nothing as interesting as the manhole cover.
 
OH-MAN said:
Pretty dang fast!.
Voyager 1 is trucking along at 17 Km per second or about 38,000 mph.

Yea, breaking news:

After 43 years and 14 billion miles, Voyager 1 was completely destroyed by what appeared to be a flying manhole cover...
 
The real question is who thought a manhole cover would somehow contain a NUCLEAR EXPLOSION?
 
I have been around a shit ton of manhole covers and I wonder what were the Dim. of a 1000 LB. unit were?
 
https://www.wearethemighty.com/articles/these-air-force-rods-from-god-could-hit-with-the-force-of-a-nuclear-weapon/
I like this one, titanium rods from god
 
QuietM4 said:
The real question is who thought a manhole cover would somehow contain a NUCLEAR EXPLOSION?
And what did they think would happen if the manhole cover actually did contain the nuclear explosion? Where would that explosion have gone? Think about what happens if you plug the barrel of a firearm. Seems to me if you are going to set off a nuclear explosion, you don't really want to contain it, do you?
 
OH-MAN said:
I have been around a s*** ton of manhole covers and I wonder what were the Dim. of a 1000 LB. unit were?

The everyday in the street manhole covers are not light, Id guess 300+ word there is guess.
 
Isn't it more likely that the manhole cover was vaporized by the heat, and was converted into gas?
 
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