MADE ON EARTH: Strike Anywhere

MOE_strike.jpg

Photograph by Noah Weinstein

Teen firebug Billy Gordon knew what to do when he saw matches on sale at the supermarket. Buy 20,000 of them. And when he got them home? Use them to build one gigantic, strike-anywhere match.

He measured an ordinary 2¼-inch kitchen match with digital calipers, then scaled it up precisely to 8 feet. That meant he needed an explosive match head 7 inches long, laid on 1 inch thick.

"I've been doing pyrotechnical projects my entire life," says Gordon. At age 8 he dismantled fireworks and concocted new ones under parental supervision. By his teens he had taught himself to breathe fire, using kerosene or paraffin. His recent Instructables projects (screen name: Tetranitrate) include flash powder, thermite, exploding paint, an egg-timer detonator, "fire shaving" (mmm, burnt hair), and a really-not-advisable laser tattoo (mmm, burnt flesh).

Now 20, Gordon splits his time between his intern gig at Instructables HQ in San Francisco and NYU's Polytechnic Institute in Brooklyn, N. Y., where his studies in electrical engineering have sparked nonflammable projects like an LED chess set, hand-cranked Lego USB charger, and spy camera shirt.

To make the mighty match head, he spent weeks cutting the heads off 15,000 cardboard safety matches. He mixed in 30 ping-pong balls dissolved with acetone to make nitrocellulose glue, then glommed it all onto a 4× 4 post. For the giant strike-anywhere tip, he snipped 250 wooden kitchen matches and glued those on top, one by one -- risky business, as the slightest impact could have set the whole thing off. A little paint to brighten it up, and it was showtime.

When igniting the giant match, Gordon didn't actually singe off his eyebrows, but at least one reader felt compelled to ask. At a show-and-tell night for Instructables users, he swung the colossal firestarter against a sandpaper striker, detonating an unexpected 6-foot fireball that nearly forced him to drop the hot potato.

"For about a half-second I was thinking, 'Great, this works,' then it quickly went to, 'Crap, I might burn myself!'"

How-to and Video: instructables.com/id/giant-match

From the column Made on Earth - MAKE 15, page 24 - Keith Hammond.


Recent Entries

Leave a comment


Subscribe to MAKE!Subscribe to MAKE Magazine!

Subscribe today, save 42% and get web access to MAKE free. MAKE Digital Edition is available only to subscribers.

$34.95 / 1 year
(4 Quarterly Issues)

Subscribe now


Void your warranty, violate a user agreement, fry a circuit, blow a fuse, poke an eye out. Make: The risk-takers, the doers, the makers of things... Welcome to Make: Online!


CRAFT Maker Shed Maker Faire MAKE television
MAKE: en Español MAKE: Japan


Check out all of the episodes of Make: television

Make: Science Room

Connect with MAKE

Be a MAKE fan on Facebook MAKE on Facebook
Visit our Facebook page and become a fan of MAKE!
MAKE on Twitter MAKE on Twitter
Follow our MAKE tweets!
MAKE Flickr Pool MAKE on Flickr
Join our MAKE Flickr Pool!
    make_tips on Twitter

    MAKE's RSS feed is here.
    Add MAKE to iGoogle - GoogleGoogle.
    How to add MAKE to your RSS reader - Real simple.
    Add MAKE on FriendFeed




    Maker SHED

    Advertise here with FM.

    Why advertise on MAKE?
    Read what folks are saying about us!

    Click here to advertise on MAKE!



    Subscribe to MAKE Magazine!

    Make: Online authors!

    Gareth BranwynGareth Branwyn
    Senior Editor


    Phillip TorronePhillip Torrone
    Senior Editor
    | AIM | Twitter


    Becky SternBecky Stern
    Associate Editor
    | AIM | Twitter


    Marc de VinckMarc de Vinck
    Contributing Writer
    | AIM | Twitter


    John ParkJohn Park
    Contributing Writer
    | Twitter


    Sean RaganSean Ragan
    Contributing Writer
    | Twitter


    Matt MetsMatt Mets
    Contributing Writer
    | AIM | Twitter


    Dale DoughertyDale Dougherty
    Editor & Publisher
    | Twitter


    Shawn ConnallyShawn Connally
    Managing Editor
    | Twitter


    Goli MohammadiGoli Mohammadi
    Associate Managing Editor

    Kip KayKip Kay
    Weekend Projects
    | AIM | Twitter


    Collin CunninghamCollin Cunningham
    Contributing Writer
    | AIM | Twitter

    Adam FlahertyAdam Flaherty
    Contributing Writer
    | AIM | Twitter



    More contributors: Mark Frauenfelder (Editor-in-Chief, MAKE magazine), Kipp Bradford (Technical Consultant/Writer), Chris Connors (Education), Diana Eng (Guest Author), Peter Horvath (Intern), Brian Jepson (O'Reilly Media), Robert Bruce Thompson (Science Room)

    Suggest a Site!

    Current Podcast

    itunesdl.gif Weekend Project: Making Char Cloth Learn how to make a cheap and effective fire starter made from an old t-shirt. To download The Char Cloth video click here and subscribe in iTunes. See Char Cloth in action with the Fire Piston from William Gurstelle.... More...

    Get the Make: Online sent via email
    Enter your email to receive Make: Online each day:



    MAKE Fascination video series brought to you by Dow

    Make: Education

    Important please read


    Subscribe to MAKE Magazine!

    Recent Posts from the Craft: Blog