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Originally posted by wararts
Now how does an EMP affect electrical systems?
Well contrary to popular belief, EMP will not temperaily disable normal electronics (most of out gov't's electronics are hardened to prevent affects of EMP). They will destroy them. What happens is this wave of electric energy formed by the shockwave searches for the easiest way to disipate itself. And since metal is a better conductor than air, this electrical charge will affect electronic stuff more than anything else. It is sort of like a power surge but on a much higher scale. Fuses , curcit breakers and surge protectors wont save ur electronic because there is so much energy it is enough to jump. A strong EMP can fuse electronics, melt wiring and blow out motors. Now the range of an EMP is not very far but nowadays with all the high tension electric wires streching the nation creates one giant pathway, one EMP can do ALOT of damage.
Originally posted by psteel
OK what about conventional weapons systems like Warships/AFVs/Jets/Helos, would they be similarly effected? What about a jets/Helos in flight?
Originally posted by minimi
Originally posted by psteel
OK what about conventional weapons systems like Warships/AFVs/Jets/Helos, would they be similarly effected? What about a jets/Helos in flight?
Aren't most of these shielded too? Oherwise the aircraft would literally drop out of the sky, and the warship would be useless, just a floating lump.
Originally posted by psteel
Originally posted by wararts
Now how does an EMP affect electrical systems?
Well contrary to popular belief, EMP will not temperaily disable normal electronics (most of out gov't's electronics are hardened to prevent affects of EMP). They will destroy them. What happens is this wave of electric energy formed by the shockwave searches for the easiest way to disipate itself. And since metal is a better conductor than air, this electrical charge will affect electronic stuff more than anything else. It is sort of like a power surge but on a much higher scale. Fuses , curcit breakers and surge protectors wont save ur electronic because there is so much energy it is enough to jump. A strong EMP can fuse electronics, melt wiring and blow out motors. Now the range of an EMP is not very far but nowadays with all the high tension electric wires streching the nation creates one giant pathway, one EMP can do ALOT of damage.
So just for clarification...no matter what hardening you have EMP will damage or destroy within a certain range?
Originally posted by Lampyridae
About ten years ago, I read about Air Force One's defensive systems. One thing that was mentioned was EMP-"proof" chips made from germanium or gallium - I'm not quite sure which. Of course, this would be coupled with hefty amounts of other shielding as already discussed.
About ten years ago, I read about Air Force One's defensive systems. One thing that was mentioned was EMP-"proof" chips made from germanium or gallium - I'm not quite sure which. Of course, this would be coupled with hefty amounts of other shielding as already discussed.
Building on the ABRES experience, the NIKE-X system that emerged in 1963-64 was a revolutionary advance in ABM technologies combining a powerful, multi-aperture phased array radar (MAR), an IBM 360 type computer, and a high acceleration missile (SPRINT) for low altitude intercepts. NIKE-X was designed against MIRVs with high performance RVs, while the computer and the SPRINT interceptor took advantage of atmospheric filtering to discriminate precision engineered decoys and other countermeasures. The MAR radar combined battle management, target and interceptor tracking functions and was highly resistant to nuclear effects. The only high confidence way to overcome the NIKE-X system was to exhaust the stock of interceptors with real RVs
www.fas.org...