From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This article is about simple fuses for
detonating explosives. For military munitions fuzes, see
fuze (munitions).
In an explosive, pyrotechnic device or
military munition, a fuse (or
fuze) is the part of the device that initiates
function. In common usage, the word fuse is used indiscriminately.
However, when being specific (and in particular in a military
context), the term fuse describes a simple pyrotechnic
initiating device, like the cord on a firecracker, whereas the term
fuze[1][2][3] is used
to indicate a more sophisticated ignition device incorporating
mechanical and/or electronic components e.g. a proximity fuze
for an M107
artillery shell, magnetic/acoustic fuze on a sea mine,
spring-loaded grenade fuze[4][5][6], pencil
detonator or anti-handling device[7].
History
The simplest form of fuse is the burning fuse, believed to date
back to the 10th century and originating in China, this simple fuse consisted of lightweight
paper filled with loose gunpowder, and served as a means of
delaying ignition in fireworks. This simple form of burning fuse
can still be found today in many modern pyrotechnics. A version of this simple fuse
is called visco fuse,
and consists of the burning core coated with wax or lacquer for
durability and water resistance. The commercial and military
version of a burning fuse referred to as safety fuse (invented by
William
Bickford) is a textile tube filled with combustible material
and wrapped to prevent external exposure of the burning core.
Safety fuses are used to initiate the detonation of explosives
through the use of a blasting cap.
Fuses
Modern day safety fuses are often used in mining and military operations, to provide a time-delay
before ignition, and they more often than not are used to initiate
an explosive detonator,
thereby starting an explosive chain reaction to detonate a larger
more stable main charge. Safety fuses are typically colored black
(military) or fluorescent orange (commercial) to distinguish them
from detonating
cords such as Primacord, which are brightly colored or
transparent.
Usage
Fuses are found in fireworks, model cannons, matchlock firearms, some improvised explosive
devices and many forms of pyrotechnics.
Types
Burning
fuses
- A slow match is a
very slow-burning fuse consisting of a hemp or cotton rope saturated with an oxidizer such as
potassium
nitrate. Slow matches are used as a source of fire for manually
lighting other devices, such as matchlock guns, or fuses on black powder
cannons. Before percussion caps, slow matches were most suitable
for use around black powder weapons because it could be roughly
handled without going out, and only presented a small glowing tip
instead of a large flame that risked igniting powder supplies
nearby.
- Today's punks (wood splints covered with
ground plant pith or dung and then saturated with nitrate) used for
lighting consumer fireworks are a type of slow match.
- A Black match is
a type of fuse consisting of cotton string coated with a dried
slurry of black powder and glue. This acts as a simple pass-fire,
and was used to fire ancient cannons. They are used today in
fireworks construction.
- A quick match or piped match is a type
of black powder fuse that burns very quickly, some hundreds of feet
per second. They consist of black matche covered with a loose paper
wrap (pipe). When lit, the flame propagates quickly down the paper
pipe from the hot gases produced by the burning powder. Quick
matches are used in professional fireworks displays to pass fire
nearly instantly between devices that must be physically separated
while firing simultaneously, such as a finale rack. Devices which
should fire in sequence can be branched from a single master fuse,
consisting of quick match spliced onto Visco fuses of various
length for time delays.
- A visco fuse has a
core of black powder
with one or more textile overwraps. The outer layers may be coated
with wax or nitrocellulose
lacquer for water resistance. These fuses are widely used in
modern pyrotechnics because they burn at a
uniform rate, with an easily visible external flame. Depending on
their outer treatment, visco fuses are water resistant and the
better quality can burn reliably underwater once lit, since the
black powder core provides both its own fuel and oxidant.
- A safety fuse consists of a black powder core in a textile tube, covered
with asphaltum or other
waterproofing agent, and having an outer wrapper of tough textile
or plastic. They are made in a standard diameter designed to be
crimped into blasting
caps.[8] Once
ignited, safety fuses will burn underwater, and have no external
flame that might ignite methane or other fuels such as might be
found in mines or other industrial environments. Safety fuses are
manufactured with specified burn times per 30 cm, e.g. 60
seconds, which means that a length of fuse 30 cm long will
take 60 seconds to burn. Manufacturers warn that although every
effort is made to insure uniform burn times, safety fuses are
subject to variation depending on conditions and should be used
with adequate safety margins.
- An Igniter
Safety Fuse Electric (ISFE) lights a main fuse or device when
activated by an electrical current. They typically consist of a
pair of wires leading to a thin resistance wire that heats when
current is applied. The resistance wire is covered by a bit of
pyrotechnic composition that ignites from the wire heating,
providing enough fire to reliably ignite the main fuse via a
mechanical connection, or the device directly. Estes model rocket motors
are lit by a type of electric match. Large fireworks displays are
launched with complex timing sequences using a computer that
energizes electric matches connected to the individual device
fuses.
- A flying fish fuse (bumblebees) is an unusual type of component
for fireworks. It is made like Visco fuse, but contains a metallic
spark composition or other effect instead of black powder. Flying
fish can thus perform as a main effect instead of just an
initiator. For example, simply lighting a short piece of flying
fish on the ground makes it fly through the air, seeming to swim in
random directions, while emitting sparks and noise. A aerial shell
loaded with many such pieces results in a beautiful myriad of
pieces flying and sparking high in the air.
- A spolette is a delay fuse consisting of a
hollow wooden dowel or a paper tube rammed full of black powder. A
spolette is glued into the wall of a fireworks shell and ignited by
the lift charge that launches the shell into the air. The spolette,
after a delay that allows the shell to reach its top of trajectory,
ignites the shell's main effect(s). The tough wood construction
ensures that the fuse burns reliably despite the explosive force
and acceleration of the launch.
- The saucisson was an
early form of fuse.
See also
References
External
links