Thorngraff_Ironbeard [he/him]

A.C.A.B (All Comrades are beautiful)

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Joined 5 years ago
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Cake day: July 31st, 2020

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  • The ADE 651 “The device features a swiveling antenna attached to a plastic grip and requires charging by a user’s static electricity. Users would insert “programmed substance detection cards” to supposedly detect specific substances, which were claimed to absorb the vapors of those substances. However, investigations revealed that the product was incapable of detecting anything, essentially being a dowsing rod. The ADE 651 was used primarily by Iraqi security forces for security checkpoints. Due to the false sense of security, many critics pointed to numerous incidents where bombings occurred despite the presence of the ADE 651 at security checkpoints, underscoring its ineffectiveness.”

    Sorry Colonel, I left the bomb smell card at base

    The ADE 651 is a descendant of the Quadro Tracker Positive Molecular Locator produced in the 1990s by Wade Quattlebaum [NAME ALERT], an American car dealer, commercial diver and treasure hunter. The Quadro Tracker was promoted by Quattlebaum initially as a device to find lost golf balls, and later as a means of detecting marijuana, cocaine, heroin, gunpowder, and dynamite using “carbo-crystalised” software cards. Like the ADE 651, it consisted of a hand unit on which a swinging antenna was mounted, linked to a box worn on the belt in which the cards were inserted to identify the “molecular frequency” of whatever the user wanted to detect. The cards were “programmed” by photocopying a Polaroid photograph of the target, cutting up the resulting copy, and pasting the pieces between two squares of plastic. Quattlebaum sold the devices for between $395 and $8,000 for a unit claimed to be capable of detecting humans, using a Polaroid photograph of the individual concerned for the “programming.” A cheaper variant called the Golfinder or Gopher was available for $69.