1994-08-25 - Re: Nuclear Weapons Material

Header Data

From: Jim choate <ravage@bga.com>
To: mpd@netcom.com (Mike Duvos)
Message Hash: 661db02c4a560d1165587f0899163bfe7bdd96b437238b6494042c1e015708b7
Message ID: <199408251812.NAA00474@zoom.bga.com>
Reply To: <199408251633.JAA16087@netcom4.netcom.com>
UTC Datetime: 1994-08-25 18:13:26 UTC
Raw Date: Thu, 25 Aug 94 11:13:26 PDT

Raw message

From: Jim choate <ravage@bga.com>
Date: Thu, 25 Aug 94 11:13:26 PDT
To: mpd@netcom.com (Mike Duvos)
Subject: Re: Nuclear Weapons Material
In-Reply-To: <199408251633.JAA16087@netcom4.netcom.com>
Message-ID: <199408251812.NAA00474@zoom.bga.com>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text


> 
> Uranium is used in munitions because of its mass, which allows it
> to go through less massive materials like steel or concrete like
> a hot knife through butter.  It is used both for bullets and
> shell casings.  Especially anti-tank rounds and shells designed
> to penetrate hardened military facilities.  The idea is that the
> uranium penetrates the armor and the charge then explodes once
> the round is inside.
> 
I would like to request some reference on the use of Uranium in the casing
of a shell or round. The casing gets thrown out on the ground (by both
aircraft and tanks) when the round goes off. There is no reason to use
anything other than brass or steel for this.

As to the use in a round, the idea is like a sabot. When the ke of the shell
is conserved on impact the more massive core goes right on into the target.
          
I can find no reference any U-core round being HE or otherwise carrying a 
charge. In all cases that I am aware of and can find reference to it is simply
a KE attack on the target where the by products of the impact bounce around
inside the target grinding up whatever is in there.

Take care.






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