Gravel mines , also called button mines , are small American-made air-dropped anti-personnel mines . They were used extensively during the Vietnam War as part of the McNamara Line . They were also used as a rapid-deployment area denial expedient , to provide a barrier during combat search and rescue (CSAR) operations between downed pilots or other endangered units and infantry threats.
5-615: XM22 may refer to either: Gravel mine , a small mine Stoner 63 , a rifle [REDACTED] Topics referred to by the same term This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the same title formed as a letter–number combination. If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=XM22&oldid=1254360854 " Category : Letter–number combination disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description
10-543: A fuse on contact. The explosive lumps came in wedge or cubed shapes and their plasticizers evaporated after three to eight minutes exposure to air. To allow them to be handled and dropped from the air, the mines were phlegmatized with Freon 113 , in which they were stored soaked. Once released from their container, the Freon would evaporate in between 3 and 8 minutes, thereby arming the mines. The mines varied in size, from simple warning bomblets (Button mines), whose detonation
15-409: Is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Gravel mine The mines consisted of a small green or brown camouflage fabric pouch filled with lead(II) azide and 30 grams of coarse ground glass between two sheets of plastic. No fuse was required because the explosive became shock-sensitive after dispersal, i.e. able to be detonated without
20-602: The U.S. during the Battle of Khe Sanh ; however, a U.S. Air Force history described them as being "little more than a nuisance," due to the Viet Cong clearing the gravel mine fields by using teams of oxen that dragged logs over them and to the mines themselves becoming inert after a short time. A total of 37 million gravel mines were produced between 1967 and 1968, though mines were produced into 1970. The mines were typically deployed from SUU-41A/A and SUU-41B/A dispensers, with
25-431: Was to be picked up by air dropped acoustic sensors and relayed to a central control center , through to larger mines, while not powerful enough to kill a person outright, they were capable of wounding anyone stepping on it. The larger mines were fitted with a two tablet chemical system to gradually render the explosive inert, although the reliability of this mechanism was never gauged accurately. The mines were also used by
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