roadside explosive charge - meaning and definition. What is roadside explosive charge
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What (who) is roadside explosive charge - definition

HOMEMADE BOMB
Rubber Band Grenade; Grenade in a Can; Improvised Explosive Device; Improvised explosive devices; IEDs; Roadside bomb; Blast bomb; Homemade bomb; Roadside Bomb; Improvised explosive; Roadside bombing; Collar bomber; Roadside bombings; Collar bomb case; Counter ied; SIED; Backpack bomb; IRAMS; IRAMs; Improvised radiological device; Improvised chemical device; Improvised radioactive device; RCIED; VOIED; CWIED; Command Wire Improvised Explosive Device; Radio-Controlled Improvised Explosive Device; Radio controlled improvised explosive device; Victim operated improvised explosive device; Victim-operated improvised explosive device; Improvised Explosive Devices; Road side bombs; Road side bomb; Improved explosive devices; Improvised explosive device (IED); Improvised explosives; Collar bomb; Homemade explosive; DBIED; HBIED; Homemade chemical bomb; Acid bomb; Homemade explosive device
  • U.S. Marines with Explosive Ordnance Disposal (EOD) destroy an improvised explosive device cache in southern [[Afghanistan]] in June 2010.
  • Anbar campaign]]
  • Oil-drum roadside IED removed from culvert in 1984
  • booby-trapped]] buildings.
  • [[Ammunition]] rigged for an IED discovered in [[Baghdad]] by the [[Iraqi Police]] during November of 2005
  • A U.S. Marine in Iraq shown with a [[robot]] used for disposal of buried devices
  • Captured IEDs from a cache left behind by the [[Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant]], Syria, 26 January 2019.
  • concave]] copper shape on top defines an [[explosively formed penetrator]]/projectile.
  • [[Artillery shell]]s and gasoline cans discovered in the back of a pick-up truck in Iraq
  • A [[Stryker]] lies on its side following a buried IED blast in [[Iraq]]. (2007)
  • Wheelbarrow]] counter-IED robot on streets of Northern Ireland in 1978

Explosive         
  • Demonstration of the explosive properties of three different explosives; four explosions are demonstrated. Three are conducted on a solid marble base, and one is conducted on the demonstrator's hand; each is initiated by a glowing wooden stick.
  • A video on safety precautions at blast sites
  • pictogram]] for explosive substances
  • A video describing how to safely handle explosives in mines.
  • GHS Explosives transport pictogram
  • The Great Western Powder Company of Toledo, Ohio, a producer of explosives, seen in 1905
REACTIVE SUBSTANCE THAT CONTAINS A GREAT AMOUNT OF POTENTIAL ENERGY THAT CAN PRODUCE AN EXPLOSION
Explosives; High explosive; High-explosive; Low explosive; High Explosive; High explosives; Low explosives; High Explosives; Explosive charge; Explosive materials; Primary explosives; Primary explosive; Explosive primary; List of explosives; Conventional explosive; Liquid bomb; Liquid bombs; Liquid explosive; Liquid explosives; Primary and secondary explosives; Secondary explosive; Tertiary explosive; HE-FS; Blasting agent; Energetically unstable; Military explosive; Priming composition; Detonating explosive; UNO Hazard Class and Division; Secondary explosives; Conventional explosives; Green explosives; Nitrotetrazole; Explosive material; Powder explosive; Chemical explosive
·adj Driving or bursting out with violence and noise; causing explosion; as, the explosive force of gunpowder.
II. Explosive ·noun An explosive agent; a compound or mixture susceptible of a rapid chemical reaction, as gunpowder, or nitro-glycerine.
III. Explosive ·noun A sound produced by an explosive impulse of the breath; (Phonetics) one of consonants p, b, t, d, k, g, which are sounded with a sort of explosive power of voice. [See Guide to Pronunciation, A 155-7, 184.].
explosive         
  • Demonstration of the explosive properties of three different explosives; four explosions are demonstrated. Three are conducted on a solid marble base, and one is conducted on the demonstrator's hand; each is initiated by a glowing wooden stick.
  • A video on safety precautions at blast sites
  • pictogram]] for explosive substances
  • A video describing how to safely handle explosives in mines.
  • GHS Explosives transport pictogram
  • The Great Western Powder Company of Toledo, Ohio, a producer of explosives, seen in 1905
REACTIVE SUBSTANCE THAT CONTAINS A GREAT AMOUNT OF POTENTIAL ENERGY THAT CAN PRODUCE AN EXPLOSION
Explosives; High explosive; High-explosive; Low explosive; High Explosive; High explosives; Low explosives; High Explosives; Explosive charge; Explosive materials; Primary explosives; Primary explosive; Explosive primary; List of explosives; Conventional explosive; Liquid bomb; Liquid bombs; Liquid explosive; Liquid explosives; Primary and secondary explosives; Secondary explosive; Tertiary explosive; HE-FS; Blasting agent; Energetically unstable; Military explosive; Priming composition; Detonating explosive; UNO Hazard Class and Division; Secondary explosives; Conventional explosives; Green explosives; Nitrotetrazole; Explosive material; Powder explosive; Chemical explosive
(explosives)
1.
An explosive is a substance or device that can cause an explosion.
...one-hundred-and-fifty pounds of Semtex explosive...
N-VAR
2.
Something that is explosive is capable of causing an explosion.
The explosive device was timed to go off at the rush hour...
ADJ
explosively
Hydrogen is explosively flammable when mixed with oxygen.
ADV: ADV adj, ADV after v
3.
An explosive growth is a sudden, rapid increase in the size or quantity of something.
The explosive growth in casinos is one of the most conspicuous signs of Westernisation.
ADJ
explosively
These transactions grew explosively in the early 1980s.
ADV: ADV after v, ADV adj
4.
An explosive situation is likely to have difficult, serious, or dangerous effects.
He appeared to be treating the potentially explosive situation with some sensitivity...
Nobody knows what explosive arguments the future of Europe will bring.
ADJ: usu ADJ n
explosively
A referendum next year would coincide explosively with the election campaign.
ADV: ADV after v
5.
If you describe someone as explosive, you mean that they tend to express sudden violent anger.
He's inherited his father's explosive temper.
= fiery
ADJ
explosively
'Are you mad?' David asked explosively.
ADV: ADV after v, ADV adj
6.
A sudden loud noise can be described as explosive.
He made a loud, explosive noise of disgust.
...an explosive drumbeat.
ADJ
explosively
The sound of her own chewing and swallowing were explosively loud.
ADV: ADV adj, ADV after v
high explosive         
  • Demonstration of the explosive properties of three different explosives; four explosions are demonstrated. Three are conducted on a solid marble base, and one is conducted on the demonstrator's hand; each is initiated by a glowing wooden stick.
  • A video on safety precautions at blast sites
  • pictogram]] for explosive substances
  • A video describing how to safely handle explosives in mines.
  • GHS Explosives transport pictogram
  • The Great Western Powder Company of Toledo, Ohio, a producer of explosives, seen in 1905
REACTIVE SUBSTANCE THAT CONTAINS A GREAT AMOUNT OF POTENTIAL ENERGY THAT CAN PRODUCE AN EXPLOSION
Explosives; High explosive; High-explosive; Low explosive; High Explosive; High explosives; Low explosives; High Explosives; Explosive charge; Explosive materials; Primary explosives; Primary explosive; Explosive primary; List of explosives; Conventional explosive; Liquid bomb; Liquid bombs; Liquid explosive; Liquid explosives; Primary and secondary explosives; Secondary explosive; Tertiary explosive; HE-FS; Blasting agent; Energetically unstable; Military explosive; Priming composition; Detonating explosive; UNO Hazard Class and Division; Secondary explosives; Conventional explosives; Green explosives; Nitrotetrazole; Explosive material; Powder explosive; Chemical explosive
(high explosives)
High explosive is an extremely powerful explosive substance.
N-VAR

Wikipedia

Improvised explosive device

An improvised explosive device (IED) is a bomb constructed and deployed in ways other than in conventional military action. It may be constructed of conventional military explosives, such as an artillery shell, attached to a detonating mechanism. IEDs are commonly used as roadside bombs, or homemade bombs.

The term "IED" was coined by the British Army during the Northern Ireland conflict to refer to booby traps made by the IRA, and entered common use in the U.S. during the Iraq War.

IEDs are generally utilized in terrorist operations or in asymmetric unconventional warfare by insurgent guerrillas or commando forces in a theatre of operations. In the Iraq War (2003–2011), insurgents used IEDs extensively against U.S.-led forces and, by the end of 2007, IEDs were responsible for approximately 63% of coalition deaths in Iraq. They were also used in Afghanistan by insurgent groups, and caused over 66% of coalition casualties in the 2001–2021 Afghanistan War.

IEDs were also used frequently by the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) in Sri Lanka during the Sri Lankan Civil War, and by Ambazonian separatists in the ongoing Anglophone Crisis.