View Full Version : What we were really scattering in those simulated chemical attacks
NutLoose
10th Jul 2015, 00:36
Blimey
How the British Government subjected thousands of people to chemical and biological warfare trials during Cold War (http://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/magazine/how-the-british-government-subjected-thousands-of-people-to-chemical-and-biological-warfare-trials-during-cold-war/ar-AAcJVyM?ocid=iehp)
Robert Cooper
10th Jul 2015, 02:11
They talking about the food in the cookhouse?
Bob C :E
Danny42C
10th Jul 2015, 02:23
We were doing it with mustard gas on Army volunteers in S. India '44/'45. AFAIK, didn't lose any.
But when Porton Down were doing Sarin experiments post-war, they lost one airman.
Danny42C.
rh200
10th Jul 2015, 04:40
They talking about the food in the cookhouse?
That would be the stuff lace with bromide:E.
Wander00
10th Jul 2015, 08:33
ISTR volunteers being invited to take part in trials at the "Common Cold Research Centre" at Porton Down, which later turned out to have been chemical agent trials.
Don't ask me who was on Question Time last night. However, I can quite happily discuss the use of Dipropylene Glycol Monomethyl Ether for use to aid chemical agent simulation all day long.
Not happily maybe.
teeteringhead
10th Jul 2015, 09:40
That would be the stuff lace with bromide ... which seems to be working 40 years later ..... :{
Ripline
10th Jul 2015, 12:17
Oh pleeeze don't tell me that the chemtrail conspiracists had it right all along......
Ripline
Martin the Martian
11th Jul 2015, 09:33
I dare say it won't be long before somebody tries to sue the government over it.
Wander00
11th Jul 2015, 10:05
ISTR a case or cases over the "Common Cold" trials
Haraka
11th Jul 2015, 10:50
ISTR a case or cases over the "Common Cold" trials
Oh Yes. Jokingly , at the Towers as a Cadet, I suggested that it seemed a good ploy for a couple of weeks away.
The immediate reaction of certain of our SNCO Rock Instructors rang loud alarm bells........
air pig
11th Jul 2015, 13:32
The New York subway and the London Tube were favourites for bacterial and virus propagation trials. By dropping a flask usually in the shape of a lightbulb at a station they could detect how far the subject pathogen travelled over a number of days.
Slow Biker
12th Jul 2015, 19:45
Wow, first post after lurking for so long. Back in the day at Gutersloh I had on top of my cabinet a piece if shattered Harrier canopy for training purpose. I had a visit from a Flt Lt who often acted as DS on exercise. He had been informed that nerve agent would craze an aircraft canopy; with that announcement he produced a bottle of Wintergreen oil. This is a similar colour and consistency as nerve agent he said, and continued to pour some onto the piece of canopy. I was left with instruction to monitor the effect of the agent on the canopy and report back. True, I promise. No amount of argument would convince him that Wintergreen is not Sarin, this an engineering officer too. Well it did have an effect, I got stick for making the office stink like a dodgy massage parlour.
In later years I was involved in clearing mustard gas storage sites which would throw up the occasional 10lb Ground Bomb which was indeed used for training, but that was before H&S spoiled the fun.