Death Of Three Young Ladies Backpacking...
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Richard Hammond, of Top Gear built a full-size replica of the 1605 House of Lords, with 9ft-thick concrete walls.Then blows it up with the exact amount of Gunpowder that was used during the plot. Quite wasteful I thought but I wonder how much it cost in total make build, buy the materials including the barrels of Gunpowder (from Spain I think) to make the whole programme?
No best answer has yet been selected by Beswad. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I was also initially concerned at the amount of waste(650 tons of concrete and all that timber) but having seen the end result I feel it is also of importance to learn exactly what(subsequently) devastating effect that amount of gunpowder would have had and the blast damage to surrounding buildings in London at that time.
Costly yes, but if you're going to do the experiment you've got to make it as real as possible and the programme did its utmost in that regard.
To answer your question spaced.
Yes, it certainly would have succeeded. All 200 people in the Parliament building at that time would have been killed, all buildings within 400 metres would have lost their windows, including Westminster Abbey and the blast would have been heard at least 5 miles away. Until the prgramme I had never realised that King James 1st would have been seated about 10 ft above the barrels. I always knew he would have been somewhere in the vicinity(obviously) but not directly above!
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