If you were a welder brazing furnace piping with silver or sweating on a drinking water main valve with acetylene and silver solder because MAPP gas just wasn't fast enough for you to make it home in-time for the mrs'es schedule, realize you're playing Russian roulette in the synthesis and manufacturing of a bomb with variable stability from untouchable azide to friction/shock insensitive triggerable by extreme process or repair heat.
Just never, ever let silver and acetylene gas touch.
A more accurate announcement would reflect a caution against using silver coated pipes for acetylene transport or high silver solders for joining any pipe work that risks internal exposure to the gas.
Using the gas itself (as a fuel) to weld with / using high silver alloys isn't a problem though.
I dimly recall in my locale there was a prank back in the 80s that used a Silver acetylide solution that had been dried onto some surface ... but only small milligram [1] amounts I guess.
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[ 0.28 ms ] story [ 13.8 ms ] threadJust never, ever let silver and acetylene gas touch.
Using the gas itself (as a fuel) to weld with / using high silver alloys isn't a problem though.
I dimly recall in my locale there was a prank back in the 80s that used a Silver acetylide solution that had been dried onto some surface ... but only small milligram [1] amounts I guess.
[1] http://www.sciencemadness.org/talk/viewthread.php?tid=17963#...