TMD-40 mine
The TMD-40 was a wooden-cased Soviet anti-tank blast mine used during the Second World War. The mine consisted of a rectangular wooden box which contained a detonator assembly at each end and seven 400 gram and four 200 gram blocks of explosive. The fuse assemblies consisted of a lever device, which when pressed downward by pressure pieces attached to the lid of the mine, see-sawed upward, pulling the striker retaining pin from a pull detonator. The main charge was then triggered.
Specifications
- Weight: 5 kg or 6.9 kg depending on source
- Explosive content: 3.6 kg
- Height: 10 cm approx
- Length: 60 cm approx
- Operating pressure: 80 to 250 kg depending on source
gollark: It's not Moore's law. That's transistor count, and is allegedly maybe continuing.
gollark: We get ~5-10% a year at least, which is *okay*.
gollark: Also, this person seems to just be complaining about computer speed increases being slower?
gollark: computers goodnot computers bad
gollark: Expanding on what I previously said, you can already pay for a commercial suborbital flight these days, and space travel is cheapening, so maybe by 2030 you'll be able to travel between continents by rocket in an hour or so by commercial suborbital rocket for... a million dollars or so.People will inevitably complain about this, too.
See also
References
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