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Dense Inert Metal Explosives Carcinogenic

May 23rd, 2006 at 10:54 Björn Hallberg

Defense Tech: Cancer Worries for New U.S. Bombs (via Sploid)

Civilian casualties always make for bad press. Perhaps as damaging to the war effort is having to back off a target because it’s too close to a school or hospital. So the Pentagon is always looking for new ways to pinpoint their deadly assaults, causing as little collateral damage as possible. Unfortunately, the newest weapon may cause cancer.

The Air Force Research Laboratory’s latest attempt at precision death is called Dense Inert Metal Explosive (DIME). It’s designed to be just as deadly as a conventional bomb, but keep its destructive radius at a minimum.

DIME has a carbon fiber casing which turns into dust upon explosion. Most bomb casing turn into deadly shrapnel that can kill bystanders up to 2,000 feet away.

Also, DIME’s casing is filled with explosives and tungsten powder. The tungsten’s micro-shrapnel is as deadly as regular shrapnel, but because it’s so small it’s dragged to a halt within 25 feet. It’s “a smaller but deadlier footprint - a 12-gauge compared to a rifle” writes David Hambling of Defense Tech.

Well, they did get away with Depleted Uranium so why not this.

Entry 548 filed under: Weapons Systems. This entry was posted 2 years, 6 months ago. RSS feed for comments on this post.




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