Like this stuff? Get it delivered to your email inbox daily!

Archives | Subscribe | Share: Have a great weekend -- and please, do not try and replicate the hail cannon/basketball experiment shown on the video below. -- Dan

Five Figures of Snake Oil

"There is very little empirical evidence in favor of the effectiveness of these devices."

When an item's Wikipedia entry says that, the device probably doesn't work. More likely, it's the equivalent of snake oil -- a product with questionable (at best) efficacy but exceptional and aggressive marketing. In this case, though, it retails for a bit more than the $5.99 price tag on your typical cure-all elixir. Our mystery item hearkens back to the 18th century, costs roughly $50,000, and, by the way, is really, really loud. It's called a "hail cannon," pictured right, and it (doesn't) keep away the hail.



Basically, here's how it works -- that is, "works" as in "functions." A bunch of natural gas is exploded inside the mechanism which sends out a shock wave -- evidenced by a load roaring sound -- up to the clouds. The shock wave travels at the speed of sound (of course) and, in theory, disrupts the formation of hail in the clouds targeted above. While not all that useful for most of the population, preventing hailstorms (if possible) is of critical value to farmers, for whom snow, rain, and slush is a mere nuisance, while hail is a destroyer of crops. So when storm clouds approach, farmers turn on the hail cannon -- which blasts out its noise every few seconds until the storm passes. Here's one in action -- playing basketball. (Really.)







As one can imagine, the horrific noise emitted by the machines has lead to a number of quarrels between hail cannon-armed farmers and their neighbors. And, again, they almost certainly are ineffective: thunder, which is much more powerful shock wave, doesn't disrupt the formation of hail.



Bonus fact : Stopping hail is one trick, but causing rain? Entirely different. But yes, there's an incredibly expensive device which claims to do that, too. It's called the "cloudbuster." How does it "work?" It pulls something called "orgone energy" out of the clouds, thereby making it rain. One problem: "orgone energy" is almost certainly fiction -- although there is a College of Orgonomy if you want to learn about orgone's healing powers.

Archives | Subscribe | Share:

