h a l f b a k e r yGood ideas at the time.
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I don't know about you, but I hate swimming in cold lakes. What about quickly heating the water before you jump in?
A strong, but sustained exothermic reaction could do this. You would throw in your "ball-o-chemical" wait a second (or a few) and jump in--pain free.
Sulfuric acid and water
supposedly act like that, but who really wants to carry around sulfuric acid? Another is zinc and sodium peroxide, however that reacts very quickly (not to mention the chance that the sodium peroxide blows you up). Maybe there is a better reaction :)
What do you think about that?
Hot water.
http://www.alaskaph...anks_dale_odell.jpg ...cold feet. [Amos Kito, Oct 04 2004]
Heat cubes
heat_20cubes I was googling around to determine how much thermite you would need to warm things up, and I wound up back at the HB. [bungston, Nov 30 2006]
[link]
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Wrong category for a start. Maybe [Other:chemistry] or even [Other:terraforming:water] would be more appropriate. [halfbakery:idea] is for ideas relating to this site. |
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And if you're gonna throw sulphur peroxide into a lake and then swim in it, I think I'll let you test the water before stripping down to my speedo. If you have skin left after a few minutes maybe I'll consider a dip. |
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You could have a computer-controlled turret mounted on the bank that tracks your movement and uses high-powered microwave guns to heat the water immediately in front of you. |
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Get in water, turn on blow-drier. |
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Reminds me of the billy connolly bit with the hairdryer label 'do not use in the shower'. You really had to be there. |
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or live with it... swimming in cold water supposedly increases your constitution.... |
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Oh! Sorry about the wrong catagory! I fixed that I think. I don't really think that the chemicals would cause any bodily harm, due to the fact that they would be dispersed rapidly. |
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"WELCOME TO THE _OND. NOTICE THERE IS NO P IN IT. PLEASE HELP KEEP IT THAT WAY" |
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I think you'd have a hard time chemically without dropping in a whole lot of material. I'd jump streight to nuclear. |
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I prefer to build a sauna with sticks, tarps, and really hot rocks next to the cool water. Try it sometime. Tres fun. |
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Some places have geothermal energy to heat the water [link]. So it's baked, or maybe I should say "boiled", there. |
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You might check out the "heat pill" idea elsewhere on this site. Anhydrous calcium chloride (CaCl2) takes on water very exothermically, but you are still going to need a lot of it to heat up any large body of water. In fact, you're going to need a lot of ANYTHING to heat up a large body of water, no matter how you do it, because water has such great thermal mass. |
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