...Not sure about this specific case, but death by allergic reaction can be quite horrible as far as I know. Anaphylactic shock ain't no joke.
Oh, I know, I've known people with pretty horrible allergies. The post I found said he hadn't been in pain, so I assumed he was already under anesthesia or something when he had the reaction. He was already in the hospital for an unrelated sickness, and the reaction happened during a routine procedure.
Question to the ARM staff: how known are specifics of what is being researched, constructed, done at the Hephaestus by ordinary convicts? Do they have any idea of the troubles and successes of the Hephaestus team, and how things go there, in general?
Dunno. Saint would be perfectly happy to talk about most of his work, as would Anton I imagine, but almost nobody has contacted either of us IC, and even then it's not conversational stuff- more like "I MADE A VIBRATING PENETRATOR!
MAKE A PROTOTYPE FOR ME XOXOXO".
I imagine Miyamoto has a pretty good idea, since Radio is practically one of our staff, but aside from that... I doubt there's much information dissemination. Plus, IC, you guys are only able to contact us for a few weeks out of the year, so we probably don't talk much at all.
Not sure if you grasped the concept entirely with the bed of nails idea, the whole point of using the nails is that you inset the solid mass of hexsand between the nails and rising to just below the tips of the beetlespikes. When shot by a gauss rifle the bullet would impact upon the spikes instead of the sand and channel the kinetic energy into the proper plate section of the beetleplate layer.
The idea isnt to combine the materials but rather to combine their strengths, so i dont see why it would be more expensive then simply stacking one plate atop another.
Oh, I didn't grasp the concept at all. That's kinda interesting.
Hmm. I still doubt it would work well, because the 'nails' would melt to any energy weapons pretty quick. Since the hexsand can't cover the holes the nails occupy, it wouldn't be able to 100% protect from plasma, although they would limit damage somewhat. On the other hand, it might still prevent small amounts of kinetic damage from breaking the hexsand, which is useful.
I think it might be useful, but it's less 'combining' their abilities, and more rebalancing them. Plus, it would almost certainly be more expensive than two simple plates, because the manufacturing is more complex than making raw slabs of material. Thanks for the idea though; I'll add it to my ever-growing list of experiments.