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Metalworking (rec.crafts.metalworking) Discuss various aspects of working with metal, such as machining, welding, metal joining, screwing, casting, hardening/tempering, blacksmithing/forging, spinning and hammer work, sheet metal work. |
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F. George McDuffee wrote in
: Consider that the U.S. was able to make quite serviceable nukes in 1943/44/45 with totally manual machine tools and a great deal of care, and it should be clear why this is simply a feel good measure. True, but that was a fission bomb. It took a lot of skill and the very best machine tools and minds available. To make a small high yield bomb (the kind that can fly) you need to make a hydrogen bomb. The yield is limitless, providing you can get enough tritium into it. (Near where I live the power company has dumped a considerable amount of tritium into the water shed.) Anyway, to build that sort of device a good five axis mill and a means to measure accurately are required. Surely those tools can be easily bought here in the US. But to sell them to Iran or N. Korea is pure folly. I'm sure they could, through trial and error, produce a working bomb. To give them high end machine tools and the means to measure the work just reduces the amount of time it will take them to get it right. Then they will have the means to mass produce as well. -- Dan |
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