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Tripwire
Passive triggering mechanism
Passive triggering mechanism

A tripwire is a passive triggering mechanism. Typically, a wire or cord is attached to a device for detecting or reacting to physical movement.
Military applications
Such tripwires may be attached to one or more minesespecially fragmentation or bounding minesin order to increase the area where triggering may occur. Trip wires are frequently used in booby trapswhere either a tug on the wire, or the release of tension on it, will trigger the explosives.
Soldiers sometimes detect the presence of tripwires by spraying the area with Silly String. It will settle to the ground in areas where there are no wires; where wires are present, the "strings" will rest on the taut wires without triggering the explosive, due to the product's light weight. Its use in detecting tripwires was first discovered in 1993 by Sergeant First Class David B. Chandler, Chief Instructor of the United States Army's Sapper Leader Course. That year it was introduced to students attending the course, and it was later used in combat for this purpose by U.S. troops in the Iraq War.
Another detection method is the use of green line lasers to illuminate and thus expose trip and command wires. The bright laser beam reflects off the tripwire and can be seen by the user.
Industrial applications
A tripwire may be installed in the vicinity of industrial equipment, such as a conveyor belt to enable workers to stop the equipment quickly.{{cite web
References
References
- Martens, Ellin. (19 November 2006). "Not So Silly String in Iraq".
- (6 December 2006). "A Serious Use For Silly String". CBS News.
- "FOX VIDEO: 'Silly String' is saving lives over in Iraq". The Raw Story.
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
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