In MOST places, if the grenade fuse has not been fired, possession requires permits/ licenses. The end of the fuse that fits inside the grenade is a form of blasting cap. Like blasting caps, those can be rather dangerous, and cause injury. If the fuse has been fired, it is an inert bit of metal. Of course, do not take it to school, on an airplane, courthouse, post office, or other governemnt property. If you are not sure, turn it over to law enforcement for safe disposal.
It depends on the grenade but typically about 4-8 seconds. The Soviets had a grenade called the F-1. When you got them, they didn't have fuses--the component that makes the grenade explode. The fuses came in a little can, and you got several time delays in each can. Most of them were five-second delays, but one fuse was 13-second delay and one was zero-second delay. The zero-second delay fuse was a trip fuse. You tied a cord to the grenade's pin and stretched the cord across some ground. When someone stepped on the cord, it pulled the pin and the grenade immediately exploded. Needless to say, you didn't put this fuse into a grenade until you needed to use it!
It depends on the reason why they are
between 7 and 10 seconds according to the grade of the explosion
Yes. Pulling the pin just allows the handle to snap out and ignite the grenade, which usually has a short delay due to time for the fuse(typically 4 seconds) to burn to the explosive in the center. They type of explosive is dependent on what kind of grenade is it.
Electrical impact fuze M217
get paper, gun powder, and a firer cracker fuse...........................put the powder in the paper .................put the fuse at one end.................. wrap it all to gether and wallaw. you also do something cool which is called grenade photosynthesis jk but you shove -_- gunpowder there and KABOOM onomotapoeia <RAN>
Well a sticky grenade was used in WW2. It's somekind of explosive with a fuse covered in tar to stick to something, most likely a tank. A SGL would be something that launches SG.
A hand grenade can be incredibly handy in an emergency situation. You pull the pin, throw it, and four seconds later it explodes. Let's take a look at how it works. There are four basic parts to the grenade. There's the pin, which holds the handle on, the handle itself, the fuse, which consists of a heavy metal shell with explosives inside. Technically the pin doesn't do anything. It's just holding the handle in place. This handle, however, is key. Once it comes off, the grenade is armed and there's no turning back. With the pin removed, the only thing holding the handle on is your hand. Once you throw the grenade, the handle flies off. That releases a spring that throws the striker down into the percussion cap. The impact ignites the cap creating a small spark. The spark ignites a slow burning material inside the fuse. the fuse ignites the detonator which sends off a small explosion inside the grenade. The detonators explosion lights the main explosive charge inside the grenade, and that blows it apart. Flying metal fragments from the heavy metal casing are what do the damage. So that's how a grenade works.
It is illegal to disable the SRS.
It depends on which grenade you are using. The U.S. M67 Fragmentation Grenade currently in use by the military has a fuse that burns in 3-5 seconds. The fuse that ignites the grenade can be used on all other grenades (smoke, CS, etc.) of U.S. design. Other grenades of different origin may take more or less time. I don't believe any grenade will have a 12-second fuse, though. That would be impractical, because it would give the enemy more than enough time to take cover or even throw it back. The rule of thumb with grenades is 5 seconds, and when in doubt, remember Murphy's Law: "All five second fuses burn in three seconds".
The amount of time a fuse will "burn" on a hand grenade varies. Most hand grenades made in the United States seem to have fuse times between 3 to 5 seconds. A manufacturer will make the fuse burn time according to the purchaser's specifications.
The grenade will be shot