deadly playing cards on Mythbusters

Discussions of new films, books, television shows, and media indirectly related to magic and magicians. For example, there may be a book on mnemonics or theatrical technique we should know or at least know about.
Bill Wheeler
Posts: 172
Joined: March 14th, 2008, 10:22 am
Location: Downers Grove, IL

deadly playing cards on Mythbusters

Postby Bill Wheeler » May 5th, 2005, 1:43 pm

Yesterday on the Discovery Channel, Mythbusters had a segment on whether or not playing cards could be used as a weapon that could inflict bodily harm. I only saw the last half of the segment, but they built a machine to throw playing cards at a person at 150 mph. The result...the person only received large papercuts.

Might be worth a look if you're channel surfing.
Driver: Callaway FT-5
Irons: Titlest AP-1
Wedges: Vokey 52,58,64
Putter: i-series Black #9

Guest

Re: deadly playing cards on Mythbusters

Postby Guest » May 5th, 2005, 2:58 pm

Did you catch Ricky Jay on it? It was pretty fun.
Steve V

Jeff Haas
Posts: 957
Joined: January 17th, 2008, 12:00 pm
Location: San Mateo, CA

Re: deadly playing cards on Mythbusters

Postby Jeff Haas » May 6th, 2005, 11:11 am

Of course, the one thing they didn't do was glue two playing cards together with a piece of metal in between...

Guest

Re: deadly playing cards on Mythbusters

Postby Guest » May 10th, 2005, 1:04 pm

F= mxa, where f is the velocity and m is mass and a is the acceleration.

Simple physics -- the mass is too low.

Jim Maloney_dup1
Posts: 1709
Joined: July 23rd, 2001, 12:00 pm
Location: Northern New Jersey
Contact:

Re: deadly playing cards on Mythbusters

Postby Jim Maloney_dup1 » May 10th, 2005, 1:17 pm

Originally posted by Mississippi Pete:
F= mxa, where f is the velocity and m is mass and a is the acceleration.
<nerd> F actually equals Force, not velocity. Force is measured in Newtons (defined as (kg*m)/(s^2)). Velocity is measured in m/s. </nerd>

You are, however, correct in saying that the relative mass is what prevents it from being too damaging. On the other hand, you could try increasing the acceleration to generate more force.

-Jim


Return to “Alternative Media”