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Further Information

- Military Doctrine
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BlasTech DH-17 Pistol
BlasTech DL-44 Pistol
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E-Web Repeating Blaster

PLX-2 Missile Launcher
Thermal Detonator
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Thermal Detonator

Thermal detonators are immensely powerful (and strictly regulated) explosive devices. The small metal ball looks like a common grenade, and the device's thermite casing contains the synthetic explosive known as baradium. When the detonator's sliding thumb trigger is pushed, warning lights and alarms are activated as the six-second timer counts down the detonator can be deactivated at any time by returning the trigger to its original position. The timer also may be reset manually to offer a maximum countdown of five minutes or the trigger's control pins can be programmed to act as a deadman's switch. in this setting, unless a tiny switch near the indicator light is flipped to the safety position, the detonator will explode instantly when the trigger's released.

When a detonator explodes, the baradium's fusion reaction creates a particle field that quickly expands outward, releasing enough energy and heat to virtually disintegrate anything caught in the blast sphere. Within a few seconds, the baradium core burns out and the particle field sphere collapses in on itself. Everything within the blast sphere is gone, while anything beyond the sphere's outer boundary is left unharmed.

Standard-issue Imperial detonators have a small baradium core end yield a blast radius of about five meters. The larger Class-A thermal detonator results in a blast radius of twenty meters, Some criminals have custom-built detonators with enough baradium to create hundred-meter blast spheres.

Baradium is dangerously unstable, sometimes triggering a fusion reaction if the detonator is jarred by exposed to excessive heat. Detonators have been known to explode when dropped or thrown through the air or for no apparent reason. As a result, they are strictly military-issue and illegal for civilian possession; although their usefulness creates intense demand for them, pushing black market prices up to two thousand credits per detonator.

Since a single blast can disintegrate up to two meters of permacrete, military crews often use detonators for demolitions work and detonator booby traps sometimes are set to cover retreating soldiers.

atc v2.1 - created 2/2003 || copyright © 2003 - all rights reserved