PD Mi-PK

Notes: This Czech off-route mine is actually 5 mines in one. The mine may be command-detonated, by a pressure plate up to 30 meters away, or by a tripwire suspended 700mm from the ground. The mine then fires 5 shaped charges into the target with a dispersion of 10-14 meters. The mine is issued with a camouflage net to cover the mine until it fires. Damage and Penetration for each charge are resolved separately, as is each hit number of the charges.

Weapon

Weight

Price

Type

Damage

Penetration

DPV

PD Mi-PK

10.1 kg

$1250

Off-Route Antitank

C8 B12 (x5)

10C (x5)

Nil

PP Mi-Na

Notes: This is a Czech mine used in place of the PMN in the Czechoslovakian Army. It is a minimal-metal mine, two levels harder to detect with a mine detector. The mine can be scattered from helicopters and aircraft as well as emplaced manually. If one has the safety key, the mine may be easily neutralized; otherwise, the PP Mi-Na is one level harder to defuse than normal. The PP Mi-Na is 15% likely to be set off per die of concussion applied. 8 kg of pressure is required for detonation.

Weapon

Weight

Price

Type

Damage

Penetration

DPV

PP Mi-Na

0.18 kg

$4

APERS

C1 B2

Nil

10

PP Mi-Sr

Notes: This bounding antipersonnel mine is manufactured by Czechoslovakia and used by that country and Afghanistan, Cambodia, Nicaragua, and several African nations. The grenade ball is blown 1.5 meters into the air, and double the normal numbers of fragments are directed into the chest and abdomen areas of the victims. The mine may be detonated by 3 kg of pressure, or by electrical detonation. The mine may be disarmed by simply unscrewing the detonator that protrudes from the top. It is unaffected by overpressure.

Weapon

Weight

Price

Type

Damage

Penetration

DPV

PP Mi-Sr

3.2 kg

$70

Bounding APERS

C5 B16

Nil

8

PT Mi-Ba

Notes: This is an ancient Czech antitank mine, used since the 1950s. It can be laid mechanically or by hand. The PT Mi-Ba contains enough metal to be detected normally, though the body is made of bakelite. 200 kg of pressure is required to detonate, and it is 30% likely to detonate per concussion dice applied to it. The mine is obsolete, but many were trotted out of storage as newer mines were used up.

Weapon

Weight

Price

Type

Damage

Penetration

DPV

PT Mi-Ba

7.83 kg

$205

Antitank

C21 B25

79C

38

PT Mi-U

Notes: This is a newer Czech antitank mine, used by Czechoslovakia in place of the Russian TM-series. It may be detonated by 150 kg of pressure, or 12 kg on a tilt-rod fuse. The mine is minimal-metal and is two levels harder to detect with a mine detector. If one has the locking key, the mine may be easily defused; otherwise, the mine is one level harder than normal. Overpressure also has a small chance of detonating it; 10% chance per concussion dice.

Weapon

Weight

Price

Type

Damage

Penetration

DPV

PT Mi-U

9.96 kg

$260

Plastic Antitank

C28 B32

102C

49