Dictionary Definition
flamethrower n : a weapon that squirts ignited
fuel for several yards
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
- A device that projects a flame for starting fires, it may also project additional fuel to help ignition. Used either as a weapon or a tool.
Translations
- Chinese: 火焰喷射器 huǒ yàn pēn shè qì
- Estonian: leegiheitja
- Finnish: liekinheitin
- French: lance-flamme
- German: Flammenwerfer
- Hebrew: להביור
- Hungarian: lángszóró
- Italian: lanciafiamme
- Japanese: 火炎放射器
- Norwegian: flammekaster
- Polish: miotacz ognia
- Portuguese: lança-chamas
- Russian: огнемёт (ognemǒt)
- Slovenian: plamenomet
- Swedish: eldkastare
Extensive Definition
A flamethrower is a mechanical device designed to
project a long controllable stream of fire.
Some flamethrowers project a stream of ignited
flammable
liquid; some project a long gas
flame. Most military flamethrowers use liquids, but commercial
flamethrowers tend to use high-pressure propane and natural gas,
which is considered safer. They are used by the military and by
people needing controlled burning capacity, such as in agriculture (e.g. sugar cane
plantations) or other such land management tasks.
Military flamethrowers
Flamethrowers date from the Byzantines, who used rudimentary hand-pumped flamethrowers on board their naval ships in the early 1st century AD (see Greek fire). Infantry flamethrowers were of limited range and capacity; the larger naval flamethrowers were used to set alight enemy ships' sails and rigging. The composition of the flammable chemical projected with these primitive flamethrowers is not definitively known.Modern flamethrowers were first used during the
trench
warfare conditions of World War
I; their use greatly increased in World War
II. They can be vehicle mounted, as on a tank, or hand-carried
by infantry.
The flamethrower is in two elements: back pack
and gun. The backpack element usually consists of two or three
cylinders. One cylinder holds compressed, inert propellant gas
(usually nitrogen), and
the other two hold flammable liquid - typically petrol with some form of fuel
thickener added to it. A three-cylinder system often has two outer
cylinders of flammable liquid and a central cylinder of propellant
gas to improve the balance of the soldier who carried it. The gas
propels the fuel liquid out of the cylinder through a flexible pipe
and then into the gun element of the flamethrower system. The gun
consists of a small reservoir, a spring-loaded valve, and an
ignition system; depressing a trigger opens the valve, allowing
pressurized flammable liquid to flow and pass over the igniter and
out the gun nozzle. The igniter can be one of several ignition
systems; a simple type is an electrically-heated wire coil, another
used a small pilot flame,
fueled with pressurized gas from the system.
The flamethrower is a potent weapon with great
psychological impact upon unprepared soldiers, inflicting a
particularly horrific death i.e. being burnt alive. This has led to
some calls for the weapon to be banned. It is primarily used
against battlefield fortifications, bunkers, and other protected
emplacements. A flamethrower projects a stream of flammable liquid,
rather than flame, which allows bouncing the stream off walls and
ceilings to project the fire into blind and unseen spaces, such as
inside bunkers or
pillboxes. Typically, popular visual media depict the
flamethrower as short-ranged, of a few effective meters (due to the
common use of propane
gas as the fuel in flamethrowers in movies, for the safety of the
actors), but contemporary flamethrowers can incinerate targets at
50–80 meters (165–270 feet)
distance from the gunner; moreover, an unignited stream of
flammable liquid can be fired and afterwards ignited, possibly by a
lamp or other flame inside the bunker.
Flamethrowers pose many risks to the operator.
The first disadvantage is its weight, which impairs the soldier's
mobility. Flamethrowers are very visible in the battlefield, and so
operators become prominent targets for snipers. Historically,
flamethrower operators were rarely taken prisoner, especially when
their targets survived the impacts of the weapon; in reprisal,
captured flamethrower users often were summarily executed. Finally, the
flamethrower's effective range is short in comparison with that of
other battlefield firearms, i.e. for effective use, flamethrower
soldiers must approach their targets closely, risking exposing
themselves to close enemy fire.
The risk of a flamethrower soldier being caught
in the explosion if enemy gunfire hits the flamethrower is
exaggerated in Hollywood films.
The best way to minimize the disadvantages of
flame weapons was to mount them on armoured vehicles. The
Commonwealth and the United States were the most prolific users of
vehicle mounted flame weapons; the British and Canadians fielded
the Wasp (a Universal Carrier) at the infantry battalion level,
beginning in mid 1944, and, eventually, incorporating them to
infantry battalions. Early tank-mounted flamethrower vehicles
included the 'Badger' (a converted Ram tank) and
the 'Oke', used first at Dieppe; the
most famous flame tank was
the Churchill
Crocodile.
History
The concept of throwing fire has existed since
ancient times. Greek fire,
extensively used by the Byzantine
Empire, is said to have been invented by Kallinikos
(Callinicus) of Heliopolis,
probably about 673. The flamethrower found its origins also in the
Byzantine Empire, employing Greek fire in a device of a hand-held
pump that shot bursts of Greek fire via a siphon-hose and piston, igniting it on a match on
its way out, in a manner like its modern versions. Greek fire, used
primarily at sea, gave the Byzantines a great military advantage
against enemies such as the Arab Empire
(which later adopted the use of Greek fire). An 11th century
illustration of its use survives in the John
Skylitzes manuscript.
The Pen Huo Qi
(Fire Throwing Machine) was a Chinese piston
flamethrower that used a substance similar to gasoline or naphtha, invented around 919 AD
during the
Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms period. Advances in military
technology aided the Song Dynasty
in its defense against hostile neighbors to the north, including
the Mongols.
The earliest reference to Greek Fire in China was made in 917 AD,
written by the author Wu Ren-chen in his Shi Guo Chun Qiu. In 919
AD, the siphon projector-pump was used to spread the 'fierce fire
oil' that could not be doused with water, as recorded by Lin Yu in
his Wu Yue Bei Shi, hence the first credible Chinese reference to
the flamethrower employing the chemical solution of Greek fire. Lin
Yu mentioned also that the 'fierce fire oil' derived ultimately
from China's contact in the 'southern seas', Arabia (Dashiguo).
In the Battle of Langshan Jiang (Wolf Mountain River) in 932, the
naval fleet of the Wenmu King of Wuyue defeated the
fleet of the Kingdom
of Wu because he had used 'fire oil' (huo yóu, 火油) to burn his
fleet; this signified the first Chinese use of gunpowder in warfare, since a
slow-burning match fuse was required to ignite the flames. The
Chinese applied the use of double-piston bellows to pump petrol out of a
single cylinder (with an upstroke and downstroke), lit at the end
by a slow-burning gunpowder match to fire a continuous stream of
flame (as referred to in the Wujing
Zongyao manuscript of 1044 AD). Documented also in later
Chinese publications, illustrations and descriptions of mobile
flamethrowers on four-wheel push carts appear in the Wujing
Zongyao, written in 1044 AD (its illustration redrawn in 1601 as
well).
Although flamethrowers were never used in the
American
Civil War, the use of Greek Fire was threatened, and
flamethrowers have been in use in most modern conflicts since
then.
20th century
The English word 'flamethrower' is a loan-translation
of the German word Flammenwerfer, since the modern flamethrower was
first invented in Germany. The first flamethrower, in the modern
sense, usually is credited to Richard
Fiedler. He submitted evaluation models of his Flammenwerfer to
the German army
in 1901. The most significant model submitted was a man-portable
device, consisting of a vertical single cylinder 4 feet
(1.2 m) long, horizontally divided in two, with
pressurized gas in the lower section and flammable oil in the upper
section. On depressing a lever the propellant gas forced the
flammable oil into and through a rubber tube and over a simple
igniting wick device in a steel nozzle. The weapon projected a jet
of fire and enormous clouds of smoke some 20 yards
(18 m). It was a single-shot weapon - for burst firing, a
new igniter section was attached each time.
WWI
It was not until 1911 that the German army accepted the device, creating a specialist regiment of twelve companies equipped with Flammenwerferapparaten. Despite this, the weapon went unused in World War I until June 25, 1915, when it was briefly used against the French. On July 30, 1915, it was used against British trenches at Hooge, with limited, but impressive, success.The weapon had drawbacks: it was cumbersome and
difficult to operate and could only be safely fired from a trench,
so limiting its safe use to areas where the opposing army trenches
were less than 20 yards apart, which was not a common situation.
Nevertheless, the German army continued deploying flamethrowers
during the war in more than 300 battles, usually in teams of 6
flamethrowers.
WWII
The flamethrower was extensively used during
World
War II. In 1940, the Wehrmacht first deployed man-portable
flamethrowers against Dutch gun emplacements and fortifications.
Subsequently, in 1942, the U.S. Army introduced its own man-pack
flamethrower.
The vulnerability of infantry carrying backpack
flamethrowers and the weapon's short range led to experiments with
tank-mounted flamethrowers
(flame
tanks). The British hardly used their man-portable systems,
relying on Churchill
Crocodile tanks in the European theatre. These tanks proved
very effective against German defensive positions, and caused
official Axis protests against their use. There are documented
instances of German units executing, out-of-hand, any captured
British flame tank crews. In the Pacific theatre, Australian forces
used specially converted Matilda
tanks known as Matilda Frogs.
British
The British World War II army flamethrowers, "Ack Packs", had a doughnut-shaped fuel tank with a small spherical pressurizer gas tank in the middle. As a result, some troops nicknamed them "lifebuoys". See description and image and Flamethrower, Portable, No 2.German
The Germans made considerable use of the weapon
(Flammenwerfer
35) during their invasion of western Europe, especially in
Holland and France, against fixed fortifications, but it soon fell
into disfavor, except in reprisal operations. Yet, on the Eastern
Front its battlefield and "scorched
earth" tactic uses continued until the end of the war. See the
Stroop Report link on article of the 1943 Warsaw
Ghetto Uprising.
WWII German army flamethrowers tended to have one
large fuel tank with the pressurizer tank fastened to its back or
side. Some WWII German army flamethrowers occupied only the lower
part of its wearer's back, leaving the upper part of his back free
for an ordinary packful of supplies.
As the Third Reich was deteriorating at the end
half of World War II, a smaller compact flamethrower known as the
Einstossflammenwerfer
46 was produced due to the lack of materials and funds.
USA
In the Pacific theatre, the US Marines used the backpack-type M2A1-7 flamethrower and M2-2 flamethrowers, finding them especially useful in clearing Japanese trench and bunker complexes. In cases where the Japanese were protected from the flames by deep caves, the burning flames often consumed the available oxygen, suffocating the occupants. The Marines still used their infantry-portable systems even with the arrival of adapted Sherman tanks with the Ronson system (c.f. flame tank). The U.S. Army rarely used flamethrowers in Europe, though they were available for special employments.USSR
Some Soviet Army
flamethrowers had three backpack fuel tanks side by side. Its user
could fire three shots, each emptying one of the tanks. The
mechanism used to empty the tank is not a pressurised gas cylinder
but a black powder cartridge on each fuel cylinder. This type is
used in two versions: a) Light Infantry Flamethrower (ΛΠΟ)LPO-50
and in a heavier version dragged on two wheels and remotely
triggered b) Heavy Infantry Flamethrower (ТПО)TPO-70
The ROKS-1 flamethrower was a stationary device
used for the defense of strongholds. It could rather be categorised
as a projecting incendiary mine. different from the LPO and TPO
flamethrowers the ROKS had only one cylinder with fuel.
Unlike the flamethrowers of the other powers
during World War II, the Soviets were the only ones to consciously
attempt to camouflage
their flamethrowers, The ROKS-2
flamethrower which was done by disguising the "gun" as a
standard issue rifle, such as the Mosin
Nagant, and the fuel tanks as a standard infantryman's
rucksack, to try to stop snipers from specifically
targeting flamethrower operators.
Flamethrowers have not been in the U.S. arsenal
since 1978, when the
Department of Defense unilaterally stopped using them. They
have been deemed of questionable effectiveness in today's combat
and use of flame weapons is always a public
relations issue due to the horrific death they inflict. They
are not banned in any international treaty the U.S. has signed.
Thus, the US decision to remove flamethrowers from its arsenal is
entirely voluntary.
The USSR developed a rocket launcher specifically
for the deployment of incendiaries - the ΡΠΟ-80 (RPO) or
Rocket-launched Infantry Flamethrower. It has similarities to the
famous RPG rocketlaunchers but the warhead is much bigger (approx.
2-3 liters Napalm) thus reducing the effective range.
Private ownership
In the United States, private ownership of a flamethrower is not restricted by federal law, but is restricted in some of its states, such as California, by state laws (c.f. California Health and Welfare Codes 12750-12761, Flamethrowing Devices) CA H&W Code on lineIn California, unlicensed possession of a
flame-throwing device — statutorily defined as "any non-stationary
and transportable device designed or intended to emit or propel a
burning stream of combustible or flammable liquid a distance of at
least 10 feet" H&W 12750 (a) — is a misdemeanor punishable with
a county jail term not exceeding one year OR with a fine not
exceeding $10,000 (CA H&W 12761). Licenses to use flamethrowers
are issued by the State Fire Marshal, and he or she, may use any
criteria for issuing or not issuing that license that he deems fit,
but must publish those criteria in the California Code of
Regulations, Title 11, Section 970 et seq.
CA Regs (CA H&W 12756) (definitions
and scope,
administration,
enforcement and penalties)
The book Breath of the Dragon: Homebuilt
Flamethrowers, by Ragnar
Benson describes homebuilt construction of flamethrowers for
private ownership.
Other uses
Flamethrowers also are used by people needing controlled burns, as in agriculture and other land management tasks. In ripe canebrakes of sugar cane, they are used to burn up the dry dead leaves which clog harvesters, and incidentally also kill any lurking venomous snakes. Flamethrowers are also sometimes used for igniting controlled burns of grassland or forest, although more commonly a driptorch or a flare (fusee) is used.Flamethrowers were used against Africanized
honey bee (killer bee) swarms in the 1970s.
U.S. troops used flamethrowers on the streets of
Washington D.C. to clear snow (as mentioned in a December 1998
article in San Francisco Flier), one of several clearance methods
used for the surprisingly large amount of snow that fell before the
presidential inauguration of John F.
Kennedy. A history article on the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
notes, "In the end, the task force employed hundreds of dump trucks,
front-end
loaders, sanders,
plows, rotaries, and
flamethrowers to clear the way".http://www.hq.usace.army.mil/history/vignettes/vignette_7.htm
The massive effort by city, military, and others even included 1700
Boy Scouts. The work paid off the next day, January 20
1961, with
JFK's successful inauguration.
Flamethrowers are also used for special
effects, such as concerts and special events; particularly, the
band Rammstein's lead
singer Till
Lindemann is known to use a flamethrower during live
performances.
Converted
Flamethrower 40s, which fire a 0.5% solution of CN gas in water,
have been used as riot control
weapons.
In fiction
Due to the flamethrower's spectacular effect it is often used in action movies and video games, even where in reality it would not be used.Hollywood seems
to have no difficulty getting hold of flamethrowers; however, for
the safety of the actors, they often are filled with propane gas instead of liquid
fuel. This produces a visually similar (though rarely identical)
flame effect, but without the spray of fuel, splatter of flame,
dense smoke, and area effect of the genuine fuel. In the Omaha Beach
sequence of Saving
Private Ryan, the exploding flamethrower was filled with enough
propane gas to burst the containers and produce spectacular flames.
The explosion seen occurred seconds after the tank burst - it was
caused by blowing vaporized propane onto the explosion (the cloud
is visible in the finished film as a billowing white cloud in front
of the actor).
- In Conker: Live & Reloaded for the xbox, one of the soldier classes for the SHC and the Tediz features a flamethrower called the Sinurator.
- In the anime Sailor Moon, a villan named Eugial uses a flame thrower to stop Sailor moons spiral heart attack.
- The Command & Conquer series of video games features flame weapons quite prominently, in the form of portable versions used by both the Brotherhood of Nod (Tiberian series) and the Soviet faction ("Red Alert"), as well as Flame Tanks in the employ of the Brotherhood of Nod and the Chinese PLA in Command and Conquer: Generals.
- In the Oscar winning film The Deer Hunter, Michael Vronsky (Robert De Niro) used a flamethrower to kill an NVA soldier during the Vietnam War.
- In Missing in Action 2: The Beginning film, Vietnamese soldiers guarding the bridge connecting POW camp with outside world are equipped with flamethrower, which is used later by col. Braddock to kill them off and burn the bridge.
- Carried by (and kills) the character Private Harrigan in the film Windtalkers.
- In the film Alien, the crew of the Nostromo use flamethrowers to fight the alien.
- One of the weapons in the Grand Theft Auto video game series that players can use is a flamethrower.
- In the film The Running Man, the 'Stalker' named 'FIREBALL' uses a Flame-thrower to hunt and kill criminal 'runners' in the show's gauntlet zones. His flamethrower is combined with a jet pack that allows him to fly and move around the game zones at speed.
- A flamethrower is used briefly in the Neon Genesis Evangelion movie, The End of Evangelion, by JSSDF soldiers assaulting NERV headquarters, to kill offscreen NERV employees.
- In filmmaking, flamethrowers are used as tools in simulating fires, explosions, volcanic eruptions, and other special effects.
- The character Dingodile from the video game series Crash Bandicoot uses a flamethrower as a main weapon.
- In the online Sony Play Station 3 video game Warhawk, one of the weapons is a flamethrower.
- Flamethrowers are the preferred tool (in the form of fire hoses that spout fire instead of water), at one point used to fatal effect, in the arsenal of the Firemen in Ray Bradbury's classic sci-fi novel Fahrenheit 451. In the story, the government has banned reading in an effort to control the population. Since all houses are constructed from fireproof materials, firemen have become government enforcers tasked with destroying stockpiles of any banned reading materials.
- In the Star Wars films several characters, often bounty hunters, are seen in armor which features a jetpack and a wrist-mounted flamethrower.
- In the video games Team Fortress Classic and Team Fortress 2 the pyro class has a flamethrower as the main weapon.
- In the video games Halo 1 PC and Halo 3 for Xbox 360, players can use a flamethrower as a weapon.
- In the video game Dungeon Siege, the goblin igniter robots use flamethrowers. they occasionally drop them as usable weapons.
- In the feature film comedy The Blues Brothers, Carrie Fisher's character uses a flamethrower in an attempt to kill the main characters.
- In the feature film comedy Spaceballs, in the scene that parodied the merchandising, one of the items that Yogurt introduced was, "Spaceballs: The Flame Thrower"
- In the game Heli Attack 3, a flamethrower is one of the most powerful weapons.
- In the game Army Men 3D, a flamethrower can be used to melt opponents.
- In the Sonic the Hedgehog series the character E-123 Omega has two flamethrowers built into its arms.
- In Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines the T-X has a flamethrower built into its arm.
- In the Stephen King novel The Mist the National Guard uses flamethrowers to eliminate the creatures.
- In The Simpsons episode 3F23 "You Only Move Twice" Hank Scorpio uses a flame thrower to fend off the invading US troops.
- In Night of the Creeps, a flamethrower is stolen from a police station and used to kill off zombies and alien slugs.
- In the video game, Resistance: Fall of Man, players can use a flamethrower to kill most enemies in one hit.
- In the science fiction Warhammer 40K Universe, flamethrowers are commonly used by the Imperial Guard and the Sisters of Battle.
- In the Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3 video game Turok, one of the weapons available to players is a flamethrower, used most notably to kill Soldier Bugs in the level Down and Out.
- In the novel Witchdoctor the sanitation workers use chemical packs that can function as flamethrowers to clean streets.
See also
Notes
References
- Science and Civilization in China
External links
- First World War.com: Weapons of War: Flamethrowers
- WEAPONS OF THE WORLD WAR II GYRENE: Flamethrowers
- Howstuffworks "How Flamethrowers Work"
- Jaeger Platoon: Portable flame-throwers
- Slate article from October 2001, "Why we should consider using flamethrowers in Afghanistan"
- A history of flamethrowers
- Image of flamethrower in use
- Images, including a tank-mounted flamethrower's nozzle
- The Pen Huo Qi
- history and images of Australian flamethrowers
- WWII German army flamethrowers
- Modern Russian Flamethrowers, page in Russian
flamethrower in Czech: Plamenomet
flamethrower in Danish: Flammekaster
flamethrower in German: Flammenwerfer
flamethrower in Estonian: Leegiheitja
flamethrower in Modern Greek (1453-):
Φλογοβόλο
flamethrower in Spanish: Lanzallamas
(arma)
flamethrower in Esperanto: Flamĵetilo
flamethrower in French: Lance-flammes
flamethrower in Italian: Lanciafiamme
flamethrower in Hebrew: להביור
flamethrower in Lithuanian: Liepsnosvaidis
flamethrower in Dutch: Vlammenwerper
flamethrower in Japanese: 火炎放射器
flamethrower in Norwegian: Flammekaster
flamethrower in Polish: Miotacz ognia
flamethrower in Portuguese: Lança-chamas
flamethrower in Romanian: Aruncător de
flăcări
flamethrower in Russian: Огнемёт
flamethrower in Slovenian: Plamenomet
flamethrower in Finnish: Liekinheitin
flamethrower in Swedish: Eldkastare
flamethrower in Vietnamese: Súng phun lửa
flamethrower in Ukrainian: Вогнемет
flamethrower in Chinese: 火焰喷射器