131 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
131 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 1348
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Title: HPR1348: Fuse
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1348/hpr1348.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-17 23:56:34
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---
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Bo,
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Hello and welcome Hacker Public Radio audience. My name is Mr X. This is I think my fourth
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show. It has been a while, I think, almost a year. In fact, probably over a year. I do intend
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to do one a year or at least one a year. This is really a unique service that Hacker Public
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Radio provides. You know, they try to make it as easy as possible for anyone to contribute
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a vacuum, contribute I'm sure you can too. Why not give it a go if you've got some sort of
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burning hobby or passion that you think you'd like to share with the rest of us just record something
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actually quite simple. Well, now today's podcast is a little bit different. I'm not sure exactly
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how well it fits into the hacker theme is such, but it's something that hopefully you'll
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you'll find interesting. It concerns a family member that actually fat my grandfather and he,
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like many of you had served during the Second World War and I'm sure you've all heard
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interesting stories relating to that. But, well, what might grandfather
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served in the Second World War? I know at one point he was doing something out in Africa.
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Now, I don't know what he was actually doing, but later on he came back to Britain and there he
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worked for the bomb disposal squad. Now, I don't know very much about the history of
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bomb disposal team or what they actually did really. I haven't really looked at anything online to
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to find any more background information, but it's just kind of stories and things that he told me
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when I was a young boy. He wasn't the kind of man that we'd actually talk very much about the
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war. In fact, I don't think he would talk about it at all unless I first prompted him. He was quite
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a quiet man really, but I remember him telling me things such that all over the country,
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Scotland is where I come from. Obviously, even more so than in England, there was bombs dropped
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all over the place and he said that the wardens kept look over the skies at night, had to record
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where these bombs dropped. And I said that in a lot of occasions, these bombs landed too deep,
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too difficult to recover. I recall one day when he was driving in the car and we were passing
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a forest and he mentioned that a bomb had dropped into the forest and it had carved a diagonal
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line through the canopy of the trees down into the ground. It was almost like I can a ramp
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structure and it was, I don't know how many feet down into the actual soil it was, but the
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concluded it was too difficult to remove and it just recorded that it was there and just left it.
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But up in the country, these devices are still lying underground and disturbed. It's hard to imagine
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how exciting and perpetrifying sort of life it must have been, providing this service trying to
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defuse bombs. I remember I'm telling my story in particular where a bomb had dropped into the
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middle of a field and it was broken and dropped up against a tree. And he's, he's sergeant
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that said, you know, well, come on, let's go and have a look at this, take a look at this
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bomb and see how we're going to tackle it. And so, if you can imagine there was a tree in the
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middle of this large field and there was a fence running all around the perimeter of the field.
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So they stepped over this fence and walked towards the bomb now. Can you imagine doing that,
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you know, a live device that could go off at any moment. They had to take that long walk
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to the to the active bomb. It must have been terrifying. Anyway, they got to the bomb and
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he's sergeant said, well, you know, so I can see this is a new one and you kind of haven't seen
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one like this before. I guess you better go back just in case, you know. It's a real sergeant.
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He turned around and walked towards the perimeter of the field and he got to the field and was
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just about to step over when there was a loud blast. And I think it got blown over the fence. In fact,
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obviously that was end of his commanding officer, but it's hard to imagine what that must have
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been like. Living in modern times and the peace, the vast majority of the rich nations and
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such like do, you know, the world is ultimately in peace. Let's hope it continues. But I remember
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that there was a cylindrical object that took my interest, that just to sit on the edge of his desk
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and it was, it was, oh, I don't know, several inches long and, oh, I don't know, three
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inches in diameter sort of thing and it had like a threaded end to it and a kind of mushroom
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top. And on the top of that was two studs and I remember asking, well, what is that?
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Grandad and he said, oh, well, that was a fuse from my 10,000 kilogram bomb was dropped in Aberdeen.
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And of course, that worked to obviously spark my imagination. And I can't remember if he told me
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any more about that particular story, but how he how he came to have the fuse or whether he was at
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the site when it was, when he actually if he removed it or what I don't know, but he kind of told me
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that basically the fuse is screwed into the side of the bomb. And it sits in the aircraft,
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well, well, first of all, the fuse is contained, pickering rings, I believe. And these
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pickering rings, I guess, are explosive. And in fact, the charge, it told me, was roughly
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a small hand grenade and when it goes off, it sits off a chain reaction and detonates the bomb.
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So this thing is screwed into the side of the bomb and it sits inside the aircraft and there's
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the two contacts, the top make contact inside the aircraft and charge the fuse. And I don't know
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if it's a capacitor or something in there that this charges over time as the bombs falling through
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the air and I think something like that. And as it reaches, you know, it's kind of time constant
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and after so much time it detonates, you know, there's also a terminal switch so that when it can
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also detect them, obviously, it could also detect when it hits the ground and detonate then.
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Of course, sometimes these things didn't go off and that was when the bomb disposal team would go in
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and try and defuse the bomb. I do remember watching the odd episode of
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UXB unexploded bomb with my grandfather and saying to me, you know, well, is that, you know, really
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what they do? Is it quite accurately? Still, yes, the UXB was fairly accurate. The only thing that
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isn't accurate was that they tended to show groups of people around the bomb and said they would
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never do that. A maximum of two would go to the bomb, you know, there's always be further back.
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So, this fuse kind of fascinated me and I said, well, you know, granddad, can I take it? You know,
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wait, so I told, sorry, it's here to put the, now, let me step back. What it said they did was,
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once they get the fuse out and I can't remember the details of how they removed the fuse
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exactly, but they pumped it full of tar material which neutralized the fuse and made it safe.
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So, you know, I said to my grandfather, ah, that's, that's amazing. I've had a, could I take it to
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school and tell him about it? He said, yes, I, of course. So, I put this in my school bag,
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however, it wasn't, and took it to school and, you know, told them all at school, oh, this is a
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fuse, my tenters and kilogram bomb that was dropped in Aberdeen. I, of course, were all amazed.
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I couldn't tell him much more than that, you know, there's a story last for about 10 seconds or
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something, but he's up and told them at the front of the class, and I was a young boy.
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Obviously, eventually my grandfather died, and then he died quite some time ago, in fact,
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many years ago. And it ended up, I think, in my, in my brother's room, I'm not quite sure how we
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ended up with, with this item, but, um, at this point, I wasn't around, and, uh, I've been told
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that they were watching television, and it was one of these, kind of, 9, 9, 9 programs where
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something happens to somebody, and I think they, on this show, they found a second world war
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fuse somewhere, other, I think it might have been on a railway track or something like that, and,
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um, I think it exploded in a young chap got, got hot, you know, and the story with my mother
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said, well, that looks like that, that fuse thing that, that, that, you have upstairs, is it,
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you know, and what I think it is, you know, and what, what they were saying was that, these
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fuses, over time, the, the term material, which is pumped into neutralize it, breaks down,
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and the, the fuse can become active again, and known to, to my grandfather, I guess it would be
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told, you know, at, at, at, at bond disposal school, whatever that involved, that, you know, the,
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or the pump, full of this stuff, and it, and it, and it makes it safe, but they wouldn't expect
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it, but it's, you know, sitting in someone's house for 40, 50 years or whatever, and, uh, so my,
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my mother and my brother, carefully picked the fuse up, kind of, and on the land fashioned, and,
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and my, uh, my brother, held it by his feet, and, uh,
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suppressing in the car, as a passenger, and drove carefully to, to local police station,
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where, upon the, when they came in, they, told the local WPC, you know, that, um,
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this is a fuse for my tenders, and kilogram bomb, dropped an Aberdeen, and, uh, could you,
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deal with it please? Obviously, the, the police officer was rather alarmed at this, and, uh,
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kind of backed away from the counter. It's just kind of understandable. I believe it was safely
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detonated, um, and, and that was that, always regretted the fact that I never saw it again,
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because I was quite attached to the thing, and, um, uh, in me and my brother would, would throw it
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back and forth between each other, um, believing it was completely safe, but, uh, I guess we were
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really lucky, it could have gone disastrously wrong at any time. Is hard to imagine living in,
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in these sort of times, it must, I must have been terrible exciting and, and terrifying at the same
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time, all around the world, um, I get the feeling things are becoming more unstable,
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there's all sorts of things conspiring to make the whole world less stable, in no particular order
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there's things such as, you know, boil, water, food, carrying capacity, climate change,
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these sort of things, can't imagine what, what, what it must have been like living in these,
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these, these terrible times, I do hope that doesn't come again. Anyway, I hope you found this
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podcast interesting, and, uh, if you have any comments, I'll try and put together some show notes
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and whatnot, but if you have any comments feel free to drop them to me, and, uh, I do plan to try
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and do another podcast before the end of the year, but we'll see how it goes. I can be contacted
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at MrX, at HPR, at googlemail.com, at MRX, AT, HPR, the AT symbol, googlemail.com.
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Thank you very much, and goodbye.
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You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio. We are a community
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podcast network that releases shows every weekday on day 3 Friday. Today's show, like all our shows,
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was contributed by a HPR listener like yourself. If you ever consider recording a podcast,
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then visit our website to find out how easy it really is. Hacker Public Radio was founded by the
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digital drug pound and the infonomicum computer cloud. HPR is funded by the binary revolution
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at binref.com, all binref projects are crowd- Exponsored by linear pages. From shared hosting to
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custom private clouds, go to lunarpages.com for all your hosting needs. Unless otherwise stasis,
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today's show is released under a creative commons, attribution, share a line, 3.0 license.
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