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The brackets should survive ok if they're made out of a decently thick steel - might need cosmetic application of a hammer, but should be good for reloading. The problem I see with strapping claymores to a vehicle is that the back blast can bounce off obstacles located up to a metre behind and push the claymore over before it's shrapnel can get clear - in other words it fires into the dirt instead of sending it's hundreds of ball bearings screaming towards the enemy. To put the claymore's capabilities into perspective, I once saw a bank of three fired at figure 11 targets (mansized cardboard cutouts of torso and head) which were located between about 10 and thirty metres. Even the closest target had no more than half a dozen holes in it with some of the further targets missed entirely by the storm of 2,100+ pieces of shrapnel. They certainly weren't shredded, but I for one still wouldn't have wanted to be on the receiving end - the noise alone was enough to incapacitate and at least stun long enough that the infantryman who initiated the blast could take his time aiming...
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If it moves, shoot it, if not push it, if it still doesn't move, use explosives. Nothing happens in isolation - it's called "the butterfly effect" Mors ante pudorem |
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