Viggen
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Sulphur
1. dumb question... is there sulphur on matches?
If not... is there some way I can get sulphur without buying it from the drugstore or a place like that (where I guess its 18 years limit on buying
it).
I dont need so much of it, so it would be pretty useless to buy just a few gram in a store.
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lucifer
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Most matches contain about 5-10% sulfur, some don’t.
Sulfur is also used for roses to protect them from mildew.
So you might find it in a gardening shop.
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Mongo Blongo
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I don't think they would contain elemental sulfur because they also contain KClO3 which would not be a safe combination.
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Syanide
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As lucifer stated, you can buy sulfur at gardening shops under the name of sulfur dust.
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Viggen
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Thank you Nice to know else I would buy alot of matches today
But one thing... matches from older times. Those which you could ignit by scrapping more or less anywhere... that was sulphur right?
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Polverone
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Nope, you're wrong there too :-) I can still buy those matches, "strike-anywhere" matches. Are they no longer found in your area? I don't know of any
matches that contain elemental sulfur. Everybody who's telling you to buy agricultural sulfur is completely correct: it is quite pure enough for
pyrotechnics and much amateur chemistry, plus it is inexpensive and already finely powdered.
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Viggen
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Oh... I rem when I was 5... my dad told about when he was a kid and then they had such matches I thought they were long gone everywhere But im
in Norway and we got laws and taxes for everything here
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Marvin
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I dont think any matches in common use have antimony sulphide in them, though strike mixtures in pyrotechnics books use it a lot.
Strike anywhere matches usually use phosphorous sesqisulphide and an oxidiser mixture on the head. Safety matches use a chlorate oxidiser mixture
with some fuel on the head, and a red phosphorous mixture on the packet.
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Anarchist
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Strike anywhere matches do contain sulfur. The match head is armstrongs mixture I think. Sulfur, Red Phosphorous, and KClO3. It wouldn't really be
that dangers considering the small quantity, and they are made specifically to be very volatile so you can "strike them anywhere".
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Polverone
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nope
Wrong. Matchheads don't contain Armstrong's mixture or any elemental phosphorus. Marvin nailed it.
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lucifer
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Could the phosphorus be extracted from the packet with CS2 ?
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Rhadon
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Yes, the phosphorus will dissolve in CS2. But you'll need many matchboxes to get a respectable amount of your desired product.
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Anarchist
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I think the problem is that we are all buying different brands of matches. Give us a brand name, then we can tell you far more accurately whats in
it( or you could just read the label).
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Polverone
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phosphorus extraction
Carbon disulfide won't dissolve red phosphorus to an appreciable degree, only white phosphorus. Register at http://www.the-hive.ws and look in the "stimulants" forum for many, many discussions of the extraction of red phosphorus from match striking
strips. Almost every conceivable aspect is covered in mind-numbing detail.
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Rhadon
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Oh yes, Polverone is right with the bad solubility of red P in CS2. I didn't differentiate between red and white phosphorus.
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forundretfrede
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you can isolate a little bit of WP from the striking strips by scraping them with a knive and placing the powder in a test tube. Put a little piece of
glasswool in the middle of the tube and heat the end with the powder gently. The red phosphorus will thus change to the white modification, sublimate
and recondese in the glass wool. Its not much, but enough to make it smoke when exposed to air and give a nice glow-in-the-dark effect.
Please note, that while red phosporus is rather harmless, WP i VERY toxic.
In the nasty old days little sticks dipped in molten sulphur were used to get a flame from smouldering tinder (ref. Andersen H. C. et al ;-)
Elemental sulphur is very cheap in garden centers, så why worry about synthesis?
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I am a fish
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Sulphur can also be bought from witchcraft/occult/magick suppliers (sometimes under its traditional name, brimstone).
Today I managed to buy several useful reagents (including ammonium nitrate, which is difficult to obtain in the UK), from a mail order company called
Sorcerer's Apprentice.
Chris
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a_bab
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Man, that was expensive ! 2 pounds for 30 g of NH4OH ?!
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I am a fish
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I know it's expensive. However I'm not that into pyrotechnics and so
don't require large quantities of nitrates. I'd rather pay 2 pounds for a small amount (which in fact turned out to be more than 30g) than
pay far more for an agricultural sized sack that I'm never going to use.
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forundretfrede
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AN source
A very nice and relatively cheap source of AN is from "chemical cold packs". They contain approx. 200g of AN and a little bag of water, and
wil cost you around 2 euro..... thats not bad!
(NOTE: there are two types of coldpacks, the other contain urea an a bag of water)
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Cappy
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You wouldn't happen to know which brands use which, would you? Or maybe there are easily distinguishable physical characteristics/properties.
One thing that bugs me is when chemicals/ingredients aren't labeled. Are ingredients listed on instant cold packs?
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