US shoots ahead in stun gun design
http://www.newscientist.com/article.ns?id=mg18725126.300
WEAPONS designed to fire "electric bullets" into crowds are
being developed for police and border protection agencies in
the US.
The Homeland Security Advanced Research Projects Agency, the
domestic equivalent of the defence agency DARPA, has
launched an "innovative less-lethal devices for law
enforcement" programme to radically expand the capabilities
of electric shock weapons.
Existing stun weapons, such as the Taser, typically fire a
pair of darts trailing current-carrying wires to shock the
target, with a maximum range of about 7 metres. The HSARPA
programme aims to develop wireless weapons that can be used
over greater distances in spaces such as "an auditorium, a
city street or a sports stadium".
Lynntech of College Station, Texas, is developing a
projectile that can be fired from a shotgun or 40-millimetre
grenade launcher. Grenade launchers are already used by riot
police to fire tear gas and baton rounds. On impact, the
device sticks to the target and delivers an 80,000-volt
shock for 7 seconds, using a pulsed delivery similar to that
used by Tasers. Further shocks can be triggered via remote
control.
Brian Hennings, system integration group leader at Lynntech,
would not reveal how the projectile sticks to the person,
although other weapons designed to adhere often use hooks or
barbs. "The biggest problem was making the device non-lethal
at minimum range, yet effective at maximum range," he says.
Hennings claims Lynntech has solved this by ensuring that
its round's kinetic energy is low enough to meet the safety
requirement at close range. As the projectile does not rely
on impact with the body to incapacitate the person, it does
not need to be fired at very high velocity. The weapon's
maximum range is measured in tens of metres, the company
says.
Meanwhile, Midé Technology Corporation of Medford,
Massachusetts, is proposing the Piezer. Rather than
conventional stun-gun circuitry, with batteries linked to
transformers and a capacitor, the Piezer contains
piezoelectric crystals, which produce a voltage when they
are compressed. The Piezer would be fired from a 12-gauge
shotgun, stunning the target with an electric shock on
impact. Shotguns are already used to fire less-lethal
"beanbag" rounds to subdue suspects, but these have short
range. Midé claims the Piezer could be effective at 40 to 50
metres.
Using a different principle again is the Inertial Capacitive
Incapacitator (ICI) being developed by the Physical Optics
Corporation of Torrance, California. It uses a thin-film
charge storage device that is charged during manufacture and
only discharges when it strikes the target. It can be
incorporated into a ring-shaped aerofoil that can be fired
from a standard grenade launcher at low velocity, while
still maintaining a flat trajectory for maximum accuracy.
The company claims this should reduce the impact force.
The first prototypes are expected to be delivered to HSARPA
by the end of the year. But Tobias Feakin of the Non-lethal
Weapons Research Project at the University of Bradford in
the UK warns that manufacturers' claims should not be taken
at face value. "Without thorough independent testing we
cannot ascertain their usefulness, effectiveness or safety,"
he says.
From issue 2512 of New Scientist magazine, 15 August 2005,
page 30
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