12 gauge Electric Slugs
- Manoil
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12 gauge Electric Slugs
<strong>[ Tech -> Article ]</strong>
I don't know about the rest of the Fallout community, but I for one was under the assumption that Electric shells were too far-fetched to make reality.
Wrong.
<blockquote><p><em>It’s midnight. You’re a cop patrolling the wrong side of town when you spot a mugging. The assailant is about 40 feet away, out of range of your stun gun. You shout, but he darts down an alley. It’s a dead end. The crook picks up a bottle, hurls it at your head, and makes a break for the street. You draw your gun.
And so goes the “capability gap,� one of the trickiest situations in law enforcement. For an officer in the field, this is a danger zone spanning 35 to 65 feet in which an assailant is beyond the range of Tasers and yet near enough to throw a deadly object, pushing an officer one step closer toward the use of deadly force. “Plain and simple, we need a less lethal option that works within throwing range,� says Sid Heal, a retired commander with the Los Angeles sheriff’s department and a consultant to the U.S. Department of Defense.
That’s where the Extended Range Electronic Projectile, or XREP, comes in. Unlike Taser’s conventional stun gun, which shoots tethered probes up to 35 feet to deliver an incapacitating jolt, the company’s new XREP is a 12-gauge wireless projectile that can be fired up to 100 feet from any pump-action shotgun. It sails through the air like a normal slug yet induces muscle paralysis on impact. “It takes everything that’s a Taser and puts it in a slug-like device,� Heal says.
Logistically, the biggest engineering challenge was miniaturization. With a Taser, two probes attach to the assailant, arcing up to 50,000 volts of electricity, enough to penetrate clothing. The XREP, on the other hand, uses just 500 volts to allow for smaller circuitry. Instead of arcing the current, it sends it directly into the body via barbed electrodes that pierce the skin. Lead XREP engineer Mark Hanchett says the key isn’t so much the voltage but the waveform. The current, shaped to mimic electrical signals in the body, jams the nervous system. “The waveform is the secret sauce,� he says.</em></p></blockquote>
The article continues here. You can also read on the DoD/Taser joint project of electrified 40mm rounds here.
Spotted @ Popular Science
I don't know about the rest of the Fallout community, but I for one was under the assumption that Electric shells were too far-fetched to make reality.
Wrong.
<blockquote><p><em>It’s midnight. You’re a cop patrolling the wrong side of town when you spot a mugging. The assailant is about 40 feet away, out of range of your stun gun. You shout, but he darts down an alley. It’s a dead end. The crook picks up a bottle, hurls it at your head, and makes a break for the street. You draw your gun.
And so goes the “capability gap,� one of the trickiest situations in law enforcement. For an officer in the field, this is a danger zone spanning 35 to 65 feet in which an assailant is beyond the range of Tasers and yet near enough to throw a deadly object, pushing an officer one step closer toward the use of deadly force. “Plain and simple, we need a less lethal option that works within throwing range,� says Sid Heal, a retired commander with the Los Angeles sheriff’s department and a consultant to the U.S. Department of Defense.
That’s where the Extended Range Electronic Projectile, or XREP, comes in. Unlike Taser’s conventional stun gun, which shoots tethered probes up to 35 feet to deliver an incapacitating jolt, the company’s new XREP is a 12-gauge wireless projectile that can be fired up to 100 feet from any pump-action shotgun. It sails through the air like a normal slug yet induces muscle paralysis on impact. “It takes everything that’s a Taser and puts it in a slug-like device,� Heal says.
Logistically, the biggest engineering challenge was miniaturization. With a Taser, two probes attach to the assailant, arcing up to 50,000 volts of electricity, enough to penetrate clothing. The XREP, on the other hand, uses just 500 volts to allow for smaller circuitry. Instead of arcing the current, it sends it directly into the body via barbed electrodes that pierce the skin. Lead XREP engineer Mark Hanchett says the key isn’t so much the voltage but the waveform. The current, shaped to mimic electrical signals in the body, jams the nervous system. “The waveform is the secret sauce,� he says.</em></p></blockquote>
The article continues here. You can also read on the DoD/Taser joint project of electrified 40mm rounds here.
Spotted @ Popular Science
Last edited by Manoil on Wed Apr 28, 2010 9:16 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Yeah, I too have seen this stuff before somewhere... If I recall correctly it was some sort of a documentary video thingy on YouTube or something. Personally I'm always in for more non-lethal solutions. Sure, there is the opening for plenty of abuse, but also the more common these kinds of things get the less common killing bottle-throwing drunkards gets.
Less than lethal, such a quaint term.
The ratio of abusive power maddened police officers/security guards is tied directly to the proliferation of such enlightened technological wonders.
In many systems, scenarios short of i.e : 'accidental' death by taser, the most these charming souls face for their indiscretion is a cursory reprimand. The admission of a mistake is so much more damning than the mistake itself. Reputation before ethical accountability.
Urethral electrodes would work to clarify this issue.
The ratio of abusive power maddened police officers/security guards is tied directly to the proliferation of such enlightened technological wonders.
In many systems, scenarios short of i.e : 'accidental' death by taser, the most these charming souls face for their indiscretion is a cursory reprimand. The admission of a mistake is so much more damning than the mistake itself. Reputation before ethical accountability.
Urethral electrodes would work to clarify this issue.
Alas, I myself do not share thy animosity contra our comrades in ultramarine attire. My personal faith and reliance in their cordiality, rapport et amity is stalwart. One steadfast to the cause of peace and credo of justice doth not abuse powers invested in him more or less as opportunities arise, hence my optimism.
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