
- #Bomb disposal expert plays keep calm and nobody explodes movie
- #Bomb disposal expert plays keep calm and nobody explodes tv
There is absolutely no benefit in designing a land mine that works on arming under pressure and then firing on pressure release. The issue I have is that's not how land mines work. They would often be marked, to either warn the local population, and they would mark them with piles of stones, rags, flags, that kind of thing. So that's a little pressure plate buried in the ground attached to explosives to target personnel or vehicles. Lloyd: What we saw there, that pile of rocks, is fairly realistic, particularly in Afghanistan, where pressure plate IEDs were placed quite a lot. They are incredibly professional, incredibly stoic. Lloyd: His reaction in this particular case is very realistic of the kind of guy. Trent: Felt something depress under my right foot. Sonny: Once old fat-head Shaw got on that plane. And today I'll be reviewing some Hollywood bomb-disposal scenes. I'm now a defense consultant, and I also work with industry to develop counter-EOD capability. Through my time in military, I specialized in counterterrorism, hostage rescue, bomb disposal, or improvised-explosive-device disposal. I'm a former British Army ammunition technical officer. Lloyd Davies: I'd like to say I've never been to a police station where someone picked up an IED and brought it into the police station, but unfortunately I have, so that's pretty realistic.
#Bomb disposal expert plays keep calm and nobody explodes movie
He breaks down the "red wire, blue wire" movie device from "Juggernaut" (1974) and "Blown Away" (1994).
#Bomb disposal expert plays keep calm and nobody explodes tv
Davies addresses land mines in the TV show "SEAL Team" (2018) and other improvised explosive devices in "The Hurt Locker" (2008), "Die Hard with a Vengeance" (1995), and "Bodyguard" (2018).EOD expert Lloyd Davies rates the realism of bomb-disposal scenes in popular movies and TV shows.
