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EMP effects in T2K
Is it just me or does there seem to be too much high-tech in T2K? The effects of EMP and HEMP (High altitude EMP) are fairly well understood as of now and with all those nukes going off, wouldn't at least some of the electronics in use by armies be disabled? I'm thinking tank fire control systems, night vision devices, radio and the like. Tanks would have some shielding, to be sure, but portable electronics would certainly be affected--and don't tell me every solider witnessing a nuclear attack would have the presence of mind to throw their NVGs into Faraday cage (think ammo can) at the moment of attack. I don't recall any rules to that effect. Has anyone limited or restricted electronic devices in their campaigns because of EMP?
While we're on the subject, how well would a battery powered red dot or holographic reflex sight (Aimpoint or EOTech) fare in terms of surviving EMP? Thoughts? |
#2
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You may be right in terms of that gear, but I've always thought that there was too much EMP damage in terms of civilian gear.
The idea that there aren't any working computers in all of Europe seems too much. If nothing else, they would have been recovered from areas away from nuke sites and moved. I think the real problem was the foresight to understand how much electronic gear there would have been in the world in 2000 when they were writing in the1980s. |
#3
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Altitude would be a significant factor. Below about 10 kilometers, EMP is almost negligible because most of the electrons are absorbed by atmosphere before they can interact with Earth's magnetic field. Smaller items will also tend to be safer - check the appendix to this paper (note: PDF) for some common EMP myths.
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Writer at The Vespers War - World War I equipment for v2.2 |
#4
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Quote:
LOL! |
#5
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I don't know of a way to target the link to open at the appendix, unfortunately. It's the last two pages (167-168).
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Writer at The Vespers War - World War I equipment for v2.2 |
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More thread necromancy from me...
Found the following via an article about Aussie Centurion MBTs used in Vietnam. It provides an anecdotal account starting in 1953, when one of the then very new Australian Centurions (number 169041) was placed about 500 yards from the blast zone of a nuclear weapons test. The device was detonated on a tower so not quite a ground detonation but not a typical airburst height either. The tower and 169041 are visible in image #8. The results are quite interesting and support the comment above from TheDark (AKA Vespers War). The last paragraph of the page is interesting in itself. 169041 was still operational in 1995 as a 'mascot' vehicle of the 1st Armoured Regiment. http://www.raeme.info/opse746.php?op...item=3#article |
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