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Gonzolo
Aug3-04, 08:31 PM
Anyone here knows what Greek fire is all about? I understand it was used in the 8th century, and the recipe was lost. Projectiles would ignite ships on impact, and water wouldn't turn it off, in fact, it would burn on water. They could also make flamethrowers with it. Is there an equivalent today, and what is it used for? Thanks.

DARKe
Aug4-04, 06:39 AM
i think they have not discover it yet.but it was called liquid fire.

blackflub
Aug10-04, 12:58 AM
all they really know about the originial recipie is that sulfur was in it. well the closest thing they use in the miltary would be napalm which really isn't that close to it. there are also substances that ignite when they contact water. i guess you could say that its the closest thing around but i don't know of any usefull applications other than some fun out in the woods.

Deeviant
Aug10-04, 10:08 PM
Anyone here knows what Greek fire is all about? I understand it was used in the 8th century, and the recipe was lost. Projectiles would ignite ships on impact, and water wouldn't turn it off, in fact, it would burn on water. They could also make flamethrowers with it. Is there an equivalent today, and what is it used for? Thanks.

Ah, yeah we have thousands of chemicals that could do the same thing. Napalm would be one of the first things that comes to mind. That fact that it burns on water is not suprizing, most oils and flamables are less dense than water thus will float. On top of water a fammable has everthing it needs to combust, just add heat.