• @[email protected]
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    10 months ago

    Fuck.

    Like, yeah thats not safe distance by US standards if thats a munitions truck, but he seems to have gotten pretty damned unlucky.

    Never says a thing. Must have taken shrapnel to the brain.

    War is hell.

    Another family without a son thanks to Putin.

  • HardlyCrabbing
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    1310 months ago

    The Ukrainians are lucky they are so fucking stupid

    • @[email protected]
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      2110 months ago

      believe or not, there are formulas for this, you need to know how much of the explosive is there and how much, if any, fragmentation will form. these distances can easily go into kilometers

        • Rentlar
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          10 months ago

          Check out this research: https://www.mdpi.com/2571-6255/6/9/331

          An explosives safety separation distance, ESSD, from a substance, article, or structure with reacting material, specifically burning material, is one where an individual would not receive second degree burns and would not be exposed to hazardous debris (<79 Joules) at a density greater than one fragment per six hundred square feet

          The table below from this site shows an appropriate evacuation distance…

          I’d presume the amount of explosive munitions in that burning truck was on the high end…

    • @[email protected]
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      1010 months ago

      Generally if an industrial accident/fire is bigger than your outstretched thumb, you’re too close.

      Since this has actual shaped projectiles in it, imma say double

    • @[email protected]
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      810 months ago

      sparks like this are burning iron (aluminum would be whiter), which means lots of steel fragmented and some ignited

    • Troy
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      510 months ago

      Is that the moon at the end, perhaps?