Wednesday, March 11, 2020

Stink Bomb Recipes - How to Make Your Own

Stink Bomb Recipes - How to Make Your Own Stink bombs smell terrible, but they are also fun. Here are instructions for how to use everyday materials to make your own stink bombs. Classic Egg Stink Bomb Recipe Eggs (fresh or hardboiled)Heavy duty needle or pin One version of this results from hiding Easter eggs really well, so that you find them when youre changing the air filter for your air conditioner in the summer. Did you catch my I have personal experience tone? If you want to recreate the stench on purpose you dont have to boil the eggs. Just use a heavy duty pin or needle to poke through the shell of the egg. You can leave the egg in the sun to putrefy, wrapped in foil if you like. I have read that if you want to keep this stink bomb for an extended period of time, it helps to store the egg in salt. I dont know for sure. I am sure when you throw or crush the egg you can expect the usual hydrogen sulfide stink and possibly some nasty odors of decay. This is probably your safest stink bomb. Hydrogen sulfide, which is the source of the famous rotten egg smell deadens your sense of smell and can be toxic in high doses. Your average rotten egg doesnt pose any major health hazard (unless you eat it), but in general you dont want to breat he in sulfur-based gases. Nasty Burning Hair Rubber Stink Bomb Hair or furRubber bandsNewspaper or notebook paperMatches or a lighter If rotten eggs arent stinky enough for you, you can wad up some hair (human hair, cat fur, dog hair... all equally disgusting), secure the hair with rubber bands, wrap the mass in notebook paper, and set it alight. Youll get suspended, since the only reason anyone uses this type of stink bomb is for a school prank. Personally, I recommend you stick with rotting seafood or or a bad egg, since burning rubber probably generates some toxic compounds. Prank stink bombs usually release ammonium sulfide. Its fairly easy to make an ammonium sulfide stink bomb, but its not as safe as throwing a rotten egg or burning hair. Disclaimer: Please be advised that the content provided by our website is for EDUCATIONAL PURPOSES ONLY.  Fireworks and the chemicals contained within them are dangerous and should always be handled with care and used with common sense.  By using this website you acknowledge that ThoughtCo., its parent About, Inc. (a/k/a Dotdash), and IAC/InterActive Corp. shall have no liability for any damages, injuries, or other legal matters caused by your use of fireworks or the knowledge or application of the information on this website.  The providers of this content specifically do not condone using fireworks for disruptive, unsafe, illegal, or destructive purposes. You are responsible for following all applicable laws before using or applying the information provided on this website.