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Journal Article

Citation

MacAndie K, Kyle P. Br. J. Ophthalmol. 1998; 82(7): 807-809.

Affiliation

Department of Ophthalmology, Southern General Hospital NHS Trust, Glasgow.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1998, BMJ Publishing Group)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

9924377

PMCID

PMC1722663

Abstract

AIMS/BACKGROUND: The causes of blunt ocular trauma are many and diverse. We present two cases of ocular injury caused by an unusual form of weapon called a "Johnny Popper". There follows a theoretical and experimental evaluation of the velocity of the projectiles fired by this device. METHODS: A Johnny Popper was constructed under expert guidance. The elastic properties of the device were measured and this allowed calculation of a theoretical exit velocity of the projectiles fired. The weapon was subsequently fired under test conditions which permitted the exit velocity of the projectiles fired to be measured directly. RESULTS: The theoretical velocity of the projectiles was calculated as 80 ms-1 and the experimentally measured velocity was 57 ms-1. CONCLUSIONS: Johnny Poppers are a previously undescribed and unique form of home made weapon. They are intended for playful mischief, but have the potential to cause serious ocular trauma.


Language: en

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