> What I did outdoors, is mix the Ammonia with Bleach and soaked it
in
>a large sponge under the vehicle's warm spot, and was hopping for a
>"Chlorine" mustard gas effect when something stepped on it....probably
>making them dizzy and ill, so they wouldn't return....
Here's another bit of insight I've researched: Chloring gas is NOT
mustard gas. While both were used in WW1, they are not the same
thing:
from wikipedia.org...
Mustard Gas, AKA (Iprit; Kampfstoff "Lost"; Lost; Mustard gas;
Senfgas; Yellow Cross Liquid; Yperite; Distilled Mustard; Mustard T-
mixture)
Molecular Formula: C4H8Cl2S
The sulfur mustards, of which mustard gas is a member, are a class of
related cytotoxic, vesicant chemical warfare agents with the ability
to form large blisters on exposed skin. In their pure form most sulfur
mustards are colorless, odorless, viscous liquids at room temperature.
When used as warfare agents they are usually yellow-brown in color and
have an odor resembling mustard plants, garlic or horseradish.
Sulfur mustards are variations of "mustard gas" (bis(2-chloroethyl)
sulfide). Mustard gas is referred to by numerous other names,
including HD, senfgas, sulfur mustard, blister gas, s-lost, lost,
Kampfstoff LOST, yellow cross liquid, and yperite. The abbreviation
LOST comes from the names Lommel and Steinkopf, who developed a
process for mass producing the gas for war use at the German company
Bayer AG. This involved reacting thiodiglycol with hydrochloric acid.
I believe this time Robert assumed he was right. He knew chlorine gas
was used in WW1, but assumed that it was also known as Mustard Gas,
which it is not. They are not the same thing. They do not have the
same effect.


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