When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Detonator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Detonator

    a small amount of a more powerful secondary explosive, directly in contact with the primary, and called "base" or "output" explosive, able to carry out the detonation through the casing of the detonator to the main explosive device to activate it. Explosives commonly used as primary in detonators include lead azide, lead styphnate, tetryl, and ...

  3. Exploding-bridgewire detonator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exploding-bridgewire_detonator

    The exploding-bridgewire detonator (EBW, also known as exploding wire detonator) is a type of detonator used to initiate the detonation reaction in explosive materials, similar to a blasting cap because it is fired using an electric current. EBWs use a different physical mechanism than blasting caps, using more electricity delivered much more ...

  4. Fuze - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fuze

    Detonation can be triggered from distant sources of interaction. This can be accomplished both by mechanical and electronic means. Electronic or electrical remote detonators use wires or electromagnetic radiation (such as radio waves or infrared light) to remotely command the device to detonate. This can be achieved by either a deliberate ...

  5. M734 fuze - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M734_fuze

    M734 fuze cross section Amplifier (top) and oscillator. The M734 multi-option fuze [1] is a rangefinder and collision detection system used on 60 mm, 81 mm, and 120 mm mortar shells as a trigger to detonate the shells at the most damaging heights of burst when combating four types of battlefield threats:

  6. Exploding wire method - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exploding_Wire_Method

    EWM has found its most common use as a detonator, named the exploding-bridgewire detonator, for nuclear bombs. Bridgewire detonators are advantageous over chemical fuzes as the explosion is consistent and occurs only a few microseconds after the current is applied, with variation of only a few tens of nanoseconds from detonator to detonator. [7]

  7. Contact fuze - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Contact_fuze

    Stabo. Fuzes for air-dropped bombs have generally used an internally mounted inertia fuze, triggered by the sudden deceleration on impact. Owing to the risk of an aircraft crash, or even the need to land with an undropped bomb still on board, these are protected by sophisticated safety systems so that the fuze can only be triggered after it has been dropped intentionally.

  8. Category:Detonators - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Detonators

    A detonator is a device used to trigger an explosive.

  9. Slapper detonator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slapper_detonator

    (A) Slapper detonator's pellet or flyer impacts a wider area of surface on the explosive output charge, and even though energy is lost to the sides of the area impacted, a cone of explosive is efficiently compressed. (B) EBW detonators only initiate a single point, and energy is lost in all directions, making the energy transfer less efficient.