Bourne Magazine: (Was that meant to be a pun on "porn magazine?") Well, as usual, explosions happen far more easily in fiction than they do in reality. At first it seemed somewhat plausible in principle if not detail, since a toaster could ignite a magazine (eventually) and the methane mix necessary to get a kaboom seemed pretty flexible. But I guess real explosions are always more complicated to arrange than movies suggest.
I'm surprised that Jamie and Adam had to put out the fire themselves after that second test at the bomb range. Don't they usually have the fire department on hand for these things? Is it deemed unnecessary if it's at the bomb range where there's nothing around to burn down? Even so, it seems kind of dangerous.
The explosion they achieved at the end was fascinating to watch. The small-scale methane ignitions in slow motion were cool too, but this was much the same in real time -- essentially a blue bubble of combusting methane visibly expanding through the room, then setting flammable things on fire when it hit them and when the room burst open to let more air in. That was really intriguing and kind of beautiful. It just underlines for me how tiresome movie/TV explosions are. They always look exactly the same, a big orange roiling fireball. I got sick of the sameness of movie explosions a couple of decades ago, but Mythbusters has really driven home how much more variety there is to the appearance of real explosions, and it just makes movie pyrotechnicians seem so unimaginative, locked into their conventional approaches.
I think they should've also tested the part in the movie scene where the people in the front yard got blown back by the explosion. They should've arranged a few Busters/Simulaids around the fake building and seen what happened when the blast came.
Blue Ice: It's a little disturbing how plausible this one is (once you weed out the absurd idea that dumping the waste is something pilots do deliberately and routinely). Although it would be very rare for that kind of multiple malfunction in the plumbing to happen, and if it did, the odds of the ice ball hitting anyone would be extremely low.
I was uncertain how well the block of ice from a bucket worked as an analog for the rougher chunk that formed in the wind tunnel test. I figured the shape and texture of that might've made it more prone to breaking up. But they addressed that very point in the "Aftershow" segment on the Discovery website. I'm not 100% convinced by their reply, but they said the chunk from the wind tunnel was pretty solid, and that they decided a consistent shape for the ice projectile was important for comparison across multiple tests (although they only showed one).
I'm surprised that Jamie and Adam had to put out the fire themselves after that second test at the bomb range. Don't they usually have the fire department on hand for these things? Is it deemed unnecessary if it's at the bomb range where there's nothing around to burn down? Even so, it seems kind of dangerous.
The explosion they achieved at the end was fascinating to watch. The small-scale methane ignitions in slow motion were cool too, but this was much the same in real time -- essentially a blue bubble of combusting methane visibly expanding through the room, then setting flammable things on fire when it hit them and when the room burst open to let more air in. That was really intriguing and kind of beautiful. It just underlines for me how tiresome movie/TV explosions are. They always look exactly the same, a big orange roiling fireball. I got sick of the sameness of movie explosions a couple of decades ago, but Mythbusters has really driven home how much more variety there is to the appearance of real explosions, and it just makes movie pyrotechnicians seem so unimaginative, locked into their conventional approaches.
I think they should've also tested the part in the movie scene where the people in the front yard got blown back by the explosion. They should've arranged a few Busters/Simulaids around the fake building and seen what happened when the blast came.
Blue Ice: It's a little disturbing how plausible this one is (once you weed out the absurd idea that dumping the waste is something pilots do deliberately and routinely). Although it would be very rare for that kind of multiple malfunction in the plumbing to happen, and if it did, the odds of the ice ball hitting anyone would be extremely low.
I was uncertain how well the block of ice from a bucket worked as an analog for the rougher chunk that formed in the wind tunnel test. I figured the shape and texture of that might've made it more prone to breaking up. But they addressed that very point in the "Aftershow" segment on the Discovery website. I'm not 100% convinced by their reply, but they said the chunk from the wind tunnel was pretty solid, and that they decided a consistent shape for the ice projectile was important for comparison across multiple tests (although they only showed one).