Once again, Gene Roddenbury was right
The first Phaser is about to be available to the
public!
A weapon that delivers a debilitating electric shock
to its victim without the need for wires is being developed in Germany.
New Scientist
has seen video stills of a prototype of the
"Plasma-Taser" in action during firing-range tests. The pictures were shown at
the European Symposium on Non-Lethal Weapons in Karlsruhe, Germany, two weeks
ago.
In the first image, a spray of dark
gas is seen approaching a human-sized target. In the next, taken a fraction of a
second later, there is a lightning-like flash of electrical discharge intended
to incapacitate the targeted person.
The
Plasma-Taser, developed by defence company Rheinmetall W&M in Ratingen, is
similar to the Taser weapon used by US police forces. In an ordinary Taser, a
pair of darts are fired at a target from a distance of about seven metres, and a
high-voltage electrical pulse is delivered through lightweight metal cables to
the darts. The 50,000-volt electric shock stuns the intruder by temporarily
shutting down their nervous system.
"Pain and
spasms"
The Plasma-Taser will not need any
wires because it fires an aerosol spray towards the target, which creates a
conductive channel for a shock current, claims Rheinmetall. The company refused
to comment on exactly how the weapon works, but it says the aerosol material is
non-toxic.
Like Taser manufacturers,
Rheinmetall describes the effects of its weapon as "pain and spasms". The
advantage? A Taser is a single-shot weapon of limited range: the Plasma-Taser
can fire repeated shots over greater range.
"It certainly looks shocking and
intimidating," says Brian Rappert of the University of Nottingham, UK. "But
there is a big difference between a lab demonstration and a working weapon. The
history of non-lethals is littered with novel, widely praised but ill-conceived
ideas."
Steve Wright of the
Manchester-based Omega Foundation, which monitors non-lethal weapon technology,
is concerned about the potential misuse of electric shock weapons. "Such new
technologies enable systematic human rights abuses to be more automated, so that
one operator can induce pain and paralysis on a mass scale," he says.
Posted: Mon - May 26, 2003 at 09:03 PM