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Old 04-10-10, 05:20 AM   #1
krashkart
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I doubted a small-caliber round could contain that much. He's lucky to still have a head. What's ironic to me, though, is that last week there was an episode of some medical drama where they had to clear a wing of the hospital while they decided how to remove a bazooka round from a patient. The operating theater was directly above a main oxygen pipe.

That's TV for ya.
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Old 04-10-10, 06:04 PM   #2
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Quote:
Originally Posted by krashkart View Post
I doubted a small-caliber round could contain that much. He's lucky to still have a head. What's ironic to me, though, is that last week there was an episode of some medical drama where they had to clear a wing of the hospital while they decided how to remove a bazooka round from a patient. The operating theater was directly above a main oxygen pipe.

That's TV for ya.
"Gray's Anatomy"

... horrible horrible show...
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Old 04-10-10, 10:32 PM   #3
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"Gray's Anatomy"

... horrible horrible show...
Agree. A wannabe ER.
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Old 04-10-10, 10:38 PM   #4
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Originally Posted by krashkart View Post
I doubted a small-caliber round could contain that much. He's lucky to still have a head. What's ironic to me, though, is that last week there was an episode of some medical drama where they had to clear a wing of the hospital while they decided how to remove a bazooka round from a patient. The operating theater was directly above a main oxygen pipe.

That's TV for ya.
Reality check O2 is no longer delivered via tubing.
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Old 04-12-10, 11:33 AM   #5
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Heres a couple of photo's .. only the first two images but it will answer the questions about the size of the round.

http://www.foxnews.com/slideshow/hea...juries?slide=1
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Old 04-12-10, 11:52 AM   #6
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It's definetely 14.5mm high-explosive incendiary; you can tell from the x-ray. Like .50cal rounds of the same type, it has a tungesten core and a small charge in the nose designed to aid in penetrating armor through heat-softening, kind of like a HEAT warhead but backwards.

My guess is that it's a chemically-ignited type of round, but I don't know enough about Warsaw Pact ammo to be sure. Apparently, the round either dropped straight down onto this guy's head with a low enough velocity that the tip didn't shatter and the chemical compund didn't ignite, or the round was fired from extremely long range. Either that or his skull was not hard enough to shatter the tip so the compunds remained stable.

I'm inclined to believe the former is the case, since the velocity of an AP round like that is high enough that it will deform when it strikes dirt, bone, metal, or anything else of substance.
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Old 04-12-10, 02:00 PM   #7
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Originally Posted by SteamWake View Post
Heres a couple of photo's .. only the first two images but it will answer the questions about the size of the round.

http://www.foxnews.com/slideshow/hea...juries?slide=1
He lived through that?

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It's definetely 14.5mm high-explosive incendiary; you can tell from the x-ray. Like .50cal rounds of the same type, it has a tungesten core and a small charge in the nose designed to aid in penetrating armor through heat-softening, kind of like a HEAT warhead but backwards.

My guess is that it's a chemically-ignited type of round, but I don't know enough about Warsaw Pact ammo to be sure. Apparently, the round either dropped straight down onto this guy's head with a low enough velocity that the tip didn't shatter and the chemical compund didn't ignite, or the round was fired from extremely long range. Either that or his skull was not hard enough to shatter the tip so the compunds remained stable.

I'm inclined to believe the former is the case, since the velocity of an AP round like that is high enough that it will deform when it strikes dirt, bone, metal, or anything else of substance.
You've a lot better idea than me on these types of subjects James....very informative
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Old 04-12-10, 04:51 PM   #8
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Interesting UnderseaLcpl. I noticed that this rounds is used in some Sniper Rifles much like our Barrett. I wonder if the Taliban got it hands on some
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Old 04-12-10, 09:22 PM   #9
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Interesting UnderseaLcpl. I noticed that this rounds is used in some Sniper Rifles much like our Barrett. I wonder if the Taliban got it hands on some
I dont know many snipers that shoot pepole in the top of the head. Hell it may be freindly fire as far as we know.
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Old 04-12-10, 09:42 PM   #10
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Very long ranged Sniper shots actually come down into the target.
Not on a flat plane.
Hollywood has many believeing that.
It's a big arc.
In nearly every case though?
A .50 cal at extreme ranges still blows the body apart.
No little hole 'AKA' Hollywood.
Massive bodily distruction!

I'd bet the round fell out of an airbourne unit.
The terminal velocity would be much less then a fired round.
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Old 04-13-10, 03:24 AM   #11
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Interesting UnderseaLcpl. I noticed that this rounds is used in some Sniper Rifles much like our Barrett. I wonder if the Taliban got it hands on some
I'm sure they have. The 14.5mm was used in the old Soviet PTRS anti-tank rifles. A lot of Soviet gear was captured in the Soviet-Afghan war, so it wouldn't surprise me if the round came from a PTRS.

Other weapons, such as the KPV heavy machine gun used the 14.5mm, but the fact that it was a HEI round leads me to believe that it was fired from a PTRS. That's pure speculation, though. I don't know anything from ground perspective in Afghanistan, but I know that insurgents in Iraq would often confuse round types in RPGs and HMGs (firing Anti-personnel warheads at armored targets and fortifified walls) I could show you if I could get my movies off my old laptop.

Going OT for a sec, does anyone know about how much it would cost to recover contents from a hard drive, or how likely it would be to be successful? I have a lot of footage and pictures that I can't get off my old HP laptop because it won't boot correctly. Thanks in advance for any help.
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Old 04-13-10, 09:14 AM   #12
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Going OT for a sec, does anyone know about how much it would cost to recover contents from a hard drive, or how likely it would be to be successful? I have a lot of footage and pictures that I can't get off my old HP laptop because it won't boot correctly. Thanks in advance for any help.
Around here about 80 bucks and no gaurentees however they are usually successfull up to 90% recovery unless there was physical damage to the drive itself.

I have heard stories of data being recovered from 'disposed' goverment fixed disks which had holes drilled through them.
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