- Apr 2, 2001
- 26,558
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Originally posted by: Brutuskend
I just got done reading a article in the local paper, among other things it said that if you get a piece of shrapnel in you from a depleted uranium round it's like having one xray ever hour for LIFE!
More on this weapon Here
We have used TONS of this stuff in the middle east so far...
Originally posted by: Czar
no forgetting that it shatters into small dust particles on impact, goes into the air, the soil, the water supplies, the food supplies
Originally posted by: Czar
no forgetting that it shatters into small dust particles on impact, goes into the air, the soil, the water supplies, the food supplies
Originally posted by: Brutuskend
I just got done reading a article in the local paper, among other things it said that if you get a piece of shrapnel in you from a depleted uranium round it's like having one xray ever hour for LIFE!
More on this weapon Here
We have used TONS of this stuff in the middle east so far...
Originally posted by: Specop 007
Originally posted by: Czar
no forgetting that it shatters into small dust particles on impact, goes into the air, the soil, the water supplies, the food supplies
Did you know unicorn horns are actually made of DU?
I mean hell, if we're gonna make stuff up lets go all out right?
Originally posted by: 91TTZ
No. That is misinformation.
For one, depleted uranium is, well, depleted, meaning it's hardly radioactive at all.
Second of all, uranium radiation is alpha particles, which are much different than X-rays. Alpha particles are stopped by skin and even a piece of paper, while X-rays go right through you.
Originally posted by: desteffy
the use of DU is a CRIME
It is still highly radioactive!
Originally posted by: djheater
I understand that a properly shaped tinfoil hat will redirect the radiation out of your body and create a mind control dispersion field...
It's pyrophoric, meaning it spontaneously combusts - generally when it fragments, IIRC.Originally posted by: SlitheryDee
After doing a bit of searching it seems like DU is effective in munitions not because of its radioactivity, but because of its other physical properties. It's a high density metal, so it slices through armor. It doesn't necessarily "burn" through stuff it like the linked article suggests. Most of the sources I see indicate that it's only slightly radioactive and while I certainly wouldn't want a piece of ANYTHING radioactive in my body, it's also important not to blow things out of proportion.
Originally posted by: kogase
Like I care if the terrorists have cancer...
Originally posted by: Howard
It's pyrophoric, meaning it spontaneously combusts - generally when it fragments, IIRC.Originally posted by: SlitheryDee
After doing a bit of searching it seems like DU is effective in munitions not because of its radioactivity, but because of its other physical properties. It's a high density metal, so it slices through armor. It doesn't necessarily "burn" through stuff it like the linked article suggests. Most of the sources I see indicate that it's only slightly radioactive and while I certainly wouldn't want a piece of ANYTHING radioactive in my body, it's also important not to blow things out of proportion.
Depleted uranium differs from natural uranium only in its isotopic composition, not in its chemistry. As such, its chemical hazards are those which would be expected from natural uranium in the same form. The metal is pyrophoric when finely divided: in a massive form, it will slowly corrode under the influence of air and water producing uranium(V) and uranium(VI) salts.
Originally posted by: drinkmorejava
Has it occured to anyway that generally when you're hit with a DU round you are going to lose your whole torso/chest cavity/arm, there's not going to be much left for the rnd to embed itself in.