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Topic ID: 273
#0, BPGD: That Gun
Posted by Gryphon on Apr-28-14 at 07:03 PM
Babylon Project Galactic Database
Text Data Extraction Search: Shepard's Compendium of Rare and Exotic Weapons
Search criteria: that gun
SEARCH COMPLETE: MARCH 14, 2409


IPO file photo by A. Savage

"That Gun"

is the common nickname for the heavily customized Steyr Model SL revolver carried by Captain Sarah L. Inazuma of the Phoenix Queen.

Background

The Steyr Model SL automated1 revolver was manufactured from 2007 to 2049 by the Austrian arms manufacturing firm of Steyr AG on Earth. Never available directly to the public, the Model SL was exclusively manufactured for the United Earth Bureau of Civil Protection, which issued them officers of CP Section 44, the section tasked with hunting and neutralizing GENOM Corporation's 33-series infiltration/espionage/assassin Boomers. As a result, the Model SL was popularly known, after the common nickname for BCP44's anti-Boomer operatives themselves, as the "Blade Runner".

A large, heavy, and accurate weapon chambered for the 5.56mm NATO rifle round, the SL earned a reputation for power and reliability that made it almost mythical in the security, law enforcement, and paramilitary industries, but by the 2060s it had had its day. As part of an agency-wide conversion to phased plasma weapons, BCP44's Model SLs were decommissioned in 2064. Most were consigned to a storage arsenal and later destroyed, but a few (no one is entirely sure how many) made their way into private hands through various quasi-legal means.

Known History

Captain Inazuma's, serial number 9613, was one of these. Owing to the very-dark-grey-market nature of the first few transactions, it's impossible to know today who bought it, or in whose possession it left Earth, or when that happened. All that is known for sure is that it had seen a good deal of action and abuse before Captain Inazuma's mother - also called Sarah Inazuma and also captain of the Phoenix Queen - purchased it in a flea market on New Chiba in 2344.

NCRYPT_ADDL_INFO CLEARANCELEVEL=MJ12 I am, of course, aware that the Captains Sarah Inazuma are actually the same woman, and I know why she bought a gun that she knew didn't work, but as this file may - indeed, probably will - be accessed by people who aren't cleared to know about Operation TWILIGHT, I have maintained the cover story throughout. -VES

It isn't entirely clear why the elder Inazuma bought the gun, since, according to her notes, it didn't actually work at the time; its servo-assisted loading mechanism had long since failed, its action had seized, and someone had tried to "officially" demilitarize it by removing the firing pin and filling the barrel with lead. Perhaps she simply wanted a project to fill the time during a long-haul hyperflight to the Rim, where she spent much of her time performing survey sweeps in the employ of the Royal Astrographic Society of Salusia. Regardless, she repaired the weapon and put it back into service as her sidearm.

Some time after that, she grew tired of constantly having to hunt for and/or scratchbuild its scarce ammunition and converted it into a blaster using the MorganArms CCRE-I system.

SIDEBAR: The CCRE System
excerpt from Wild, Wacky Weapons and Their Inventors, Don't Panic Press (2272)

"Colonel Colt's Re-Equalization System" was developed in the early 21st century by WDF founder, 3WA TroCon, semi-pro weapons designer, and all-around utility badass Kei Morgan. The story goes that one day around 2100, Morgan was playing around in her workshop with some old BlasTech "BlasCap" ammunition and got to thinking about ways she could make the largely-failed technology more useful. The first thing that occurred to her was that she could get rid of the infamous "some guns fail to operate" problem entirely simply by putting them in a gun that didn't need to be actuated by its own ammunition, such as the humble revolver, the mechanical workings of which are powered by the operator.

That led automatically to a new problem, of course, which is that revolvers don't hold very many rounds. Most hold six, which was a bit of a liability even in a 20th-century gun battle and is just hopeless in a modern lightfight. She put the project aside and mulled it over for a while, until one day she happened across one of ReRob Mandeville's SDF-17 engineering teams using a handheld pulse welder. This was an ingenious device, nowadays rarely seen, that used a rotating drum of tiny regenerating power cells (technical name "nanofusion breeders") to provide high-frequency pulses of energy which were then applied to the surface being welded. The rotating drum was necessary because, after discharging its payload in a microsecond burst, each NFB required about 500 milliseconds to recharge. The drum was sized and its turn rate calibrated such that by the time each one came around to firing position again, it would be ready to go.

Well, hey, thought Morgan, and she scored a broken PW from Mandeville's tool crib attendant, took it back to her shop, and stripped it for parts. There were still a number of challenges to overcome - supply of blaster gas, for instance, which she ended up cracking with a very clever high-efficiency cyclonic microturbine and a small pellet of an exotic solid that vaporizes into an excitable gas at certain temperatures - but within a couple of years she'd perfected what she jokingly called "Colonel Colt's Re-Equalization System" (after the 19th-century joke that God made men, but Colonel Samuel Colt made them equal).

The upside of the CCRE System is pretty simple. If you take, for instance, an old Colt Official Police double-action revolver (the testbed Morgan used for the original development project), fit it with a BlasCap barrel liner, and then load it with six .38 Special CCRE rounds - fifteen minutes' work if you know what you're doing, a couple of hours if you have to figure out how to install the barrel liner for the first time - you have... well, a blaster! Just like that!

A pretty heavy blaster, in fact, gauged strictly by its firepower, and insanely reliable thanks to the simplicity of its mechanical workings. Each CCRE round is good for a hundred firings before its gas supply is used up, and the NFBs work pretty much forever, so they can be reloaded if you have the right tools and access to the required material, too. In tactical terms, with a minuscule amount of forethought, you simply never have to concern yourself with reloading again.

The downside is that the system never actually went into production anywhere, so if you want six .38 Special CCRE rounds for your Official Police, you'll have to dig up the specs online and then make them yourself. But hey, if you've got the time and you're willing to haunt some swap meets and flea markets, you can probably score an old pulse welder for a few hundred credits. They usually had a couple dozen NFBs in them and you only need six that work. How hard can it be?*

* Quite hard, actually. Apart from the trickiness inherent in this kind of micro-making in the first place, nanofusion breeders can be temperamental little bastards when they're not in some kind of containment system. People occasionally blow themselves up real good trying to extract them from dead PWs and build them into "blaster bullets". But hey, you can't make an omelet...

Where Is It Now?

Following its CCRE blaster conversion, Captain Inazuma senior carried No. 9613 for the rest of her career. Among the many adventures of hers it participated in was the recovery of the lost colony of Mojave, during which it earned the nickname that has been attached to it ever since. No one on Mojave had ever seen a stock Steyr SL before, let alone one converted into a blaster (which were themselves unknown on Mojave, though certain laser and plasma weapons did exist there). Its visual and aural distinctiveness, and the fact that its proper nomenclature was unknown, thus led the Mojavians who encountered Inazuma to call her "the lady with that gun," and the name stuck.

The elder Sarah Inazuma retired in 2390, after the Phoenix Queen served with distinction as a hired warship for the WDF in the War of Corporate Occupation. Along with the ship and the corporate entity which operates it (Phoenix Industries Limited), she passed That Gun on to her daughter, also called Sarah, who carries it routinely in the course of her business today.

N.B. By the late 24th century, Steyr SLs had become extremely rare, with only a handful in collections and no others known to be out in the wild. Very occasionally, someone will recognize That Gun and offer Captain Inazuma a lot of money for it, but I am reliably advised that she will never part with it.

Respectfully submitted,
SHEPARD

VES/lts

1 An "automated" revolver is not the same as an automatic one. It simply means that the cylinder advance and the crane which actuates the cylinder for reloading are servo-assisted, not that the weapon has an automatic fire mode.

End of Text Data Extract
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#1, RE: BPGD: That Gun
Posted by Gryphon on Apr-28-14 at 07:15 PM
In response to message #0
If you're wondering why such a peripheral matter is getting the BPGD treatment, Merc suggested I fold the original posts that this information was in into the Desolation Angel omnibus, but they weren't written in an in-universe style and the whole thing jarred a bit, so I assembled this version for eventual inclusion.

--G.
-><-
Benjamin D. Hutchins, Co-Founder, Editor-in-Chief, & Forum Mod
Eyrie Productions, Unlimited http://www.eyrie-productions.com/
zgryphon at that email service Google has
Ceterum censeo Carthaginem esse delendam.


#2, RE: BPGD: That Gun
Posted by Delusionist on May-23-14 at 09:24 PM
In response to message #0
It's kind of surprising to see that the CCRE system never went anywhere commercially, given that BlasCap tech has apparently been commercially viable for upwards of three hundred years. One would think that there would be a clear market demand for such a system.

#3, RE: BPGD: That Gun
Posted by Gryphon on May-23-14 at 09:31 PM
In response to message #2
>It's kind of surprising to see that the CCRE system never went
>anywhere commercially, given that BlasCap tech has apparently been
>commercially viable for upwards of three hundred years. One would
>think that there would be a clear market demand for such a system.

Nah, as it turned out, not really. Turns out most people who decide they want a blaster would rather just... buy a blaster. :)

(It isn't so much that BlasCap is commercially viable as that BlasTech is like Coca-Cola - they rarely, if ever, willingly admit that they thought of a product nobody really wants.)

--G.
-><-
Benjamin D. Hutchins, Co-Founder, Editor-in-Chief, & Forum Mod
Eyrie Productions, Unlimited http://www.eyrie-productions.com/
zgryphon at that email service Google has
Ceterum censeo Carthaginem esse delendam.


#4, RE: BPGD: That Gun
Posted by CdrMike on May-24-14 at 08:27 AM
In response to message #3
>Nah, as it turned out, not really. Turns out most people who decide
>they want a blaster would rather just... buy a blaster. :)
>
>(It isn't so much that BlasCap is commercially viable as that BlasTech
>is like Coca-Cola - they rarely, if ever, willingly admit that they
>thought of a product nobody really wants.)


BlasCap always struck me as something of a niche product, for the person who likes the look and feel of old-fashioned slug-throwers, but wants the punch of a blaster in a pinch. The drawback is that it's neither fish nor fowl, as any of the flaws in the original gun will still be there, and even the best-designed semi and fully automatic slug-throwers occasionally jam.


#5, RE: BPGD: That Gun
Posted by Peter Eng on May-24-14 at 05:07 PM
In response to message #3
>
>(It isn't so much that BlasCap is commercially viable as that BlasTech
>is like Coca-Cola - they rarely, if ever, willingly admit that they
>thought of a product nobody really wants.)
>

I imagine that BlasTech has managed to keep the BlasCap division profitable, or at least to have it break even, in spite of no-name-knockoffs.

Peter Eng
--
(If that isn't how they keep it going, then it's probably something involving ownership of voting stock, or accounting chicanery, both of which are equally boring but require more fiddly detail than I want to think about.)


#6, RE: BPGD: That Gun
Posted by Gryphon on May-24-14 at 05:13 PM
In response to message #5
>>(It isn't so much that BlasCap is commercially viable as that BlasTech
>>is like Coca-Cola - they rarely, if ever, willingly admit that they
>>thought of a product nobody really wants.)
>>
>I imagine that BlasTech has managed to keep the BlasCap division
>profitable, or at least to have it break even, in spite of
>no-name-knockoffs.

Well, if you don't take the development costs into account (and you don't, because they managed to bury those somewhere else in the audit that year), they don't cost very much to produce, and the company does virtually no marketing for them, so it doesn't take a lot of sales for the product line to at least not show a loss. By the 2400s they're one of those niche products most people have never heard of, and most of the rest are surprised to learn that you can still buy them. :)

--G.
-><-
Benjamin D. Hutchins, Co-Founder, Editor-in-Chief, & Forum Mod
Eyrie Productions, Unlimited http://www.eyrie-productions.com/
zgryphon at that email service Google has
Ceterum censeo Carthaginem esse delendam.


#7, RE: BPGD: That Gun
Posted by Mercutio on May-26-14 at 06:08 PM
In response to message #2
>It's kind of surprising to see that the CCRE system never went
>anywhere commercially, given that BlasCap tech has apparently been
>commercially viable for upwards of three hundred years. One would
>think that there would be a clear market demand for such a system.

I sort of imagine that sales of BlasCaps spike every time they make contact with a planet in a similar development stage to Earth at the time of First Contact, that has tons and tons of slugthrowers floating around. Such a planet would rush to adopt energy weapon platforms (raising the local prices sky-high) and BlasCaps would be an attractive proposition to those who have a shit-ton of AK-47 equivalents lying around, can't really afford to convert to the E-11 or DC-15 en masse, but would like to remain somehow competitive anyway. Answer: BlasCaps.

-Merc
Keep Rat


#8, RE: BPGD: That Gun
Posted by Gryphon on May-26-14 at 06:14 PM
In response to message #7
>BlasCaps would be an
>attractive proposition to those who have a shit-ton of AK-47
>equivalents lying around, can't really afford to convert to the E-11
>or DC-15 en masse, but would like to remain somehow competitive
>anyway.

That's possible, but it's important to keep in mind that in the UF universe, it isn't strictly an either-or proposition. Plenty of the 25th century's frontline weapons aren't zap guns or death rays. The Royal Salusian Armed Forces, for instance, remain partial to guns that throw little bits of metal, albeit such advanced examples of the type that they make their 20th-century ancestors seem a little bit like throwing rocks.

--G.
"Vladof! You don't need to be a better shot; you just need to shoot more bullets."
-><-
Benjamin D. Hutchins, Co-Founder, Editor-in-Chief, & Forum Mod
Eyrie Productions, Unlimited http://www.eyrie-productions.com/
zgryphon at that email service Google has
Ceterum censeo Carthaginem esse delendam.


#9, RE: BPGD: That Gun
Posted by CdrMike on May-26-14 at 07:38 PM
In response to message #8
>That's possible, but it's important to keep in mind that in the UF
>universe, it isn't strictly an either-or proposition. Plenty of the
>25th century's frontline weapons aren't zap guns or death rays. The
>Royal Salusian Armed Forces, for instance, remain partial to guns that
>throw little bits of metal, albeit such advanced examples of the type
>that they make their 20th-century ancestors seem a little bit like
>throwing rocks.

I imagine that most newcomers to the galactic stage usually take a few years, if not decades, before they even begin to think about adopting some form of directed-energy weapon as standard issue. Earth at the time of First Contact certainly didn't have the industrial base to support DEW weapons, certainly not in the numbers necessary to arm the armed forces of any major nation. And it's traditionally been a bad idea to make your military's logistics dependent on the good graces of another nation who might come under pressure to stop filling your weapon orders.


#10, RE: BPGD: That Gun
Posted by Mercutio on May-26-14 at 10:33 PM
In response to message #9

>I imagine that most newcomers to the galactic stage usually take a few
>years, if not decades, before they even begin to think about adopting
>some form of directed-energy weapon as standard issue. Earth at the
>time of First Contact certainly didn't have the industrial base to
>support DEW weapons, certainly not in the numbers necessary to arm the
>armed forces of any major nation. And it's traditionally been a bad
>idea to make your military's logistics dependent on the good graces of
>another nation who might come under pressure to stop filling your
>weapon orders.

It's been a bad idea, but lots of countries have done it anyway. Hell, in the context of UF, many interplanetary polities continue to do it; Corellia is not precisely what you'd call the friendliest neighbor there is and BlasTech seems to be in no danger of going out of business. Genom's MilArm and it's various subsidiaries such as BudgetArms probably do brisk sales as well.

Your logic makes sense for a planet with a unified planetary government that's both not under immediate extraplanetary threat and is at all interested in good governance. But for a planet still made up of warring nation-states, as Earth was at the time of First Contact?

Those guys are all gonna be looking for a leg up on each other. That's gonna mean, in addition to scaling up their infrastructure as fast as possible, they're going to be buying arms from off-world. And once one nation-state does it, many others will follow suit. Once the US Army inks a deal for a couple million E-11s (probably accompanied by a fat logistical support deal for maintaining same, just like they'd sign with Raytheon or Boeing) you bet your ass the Chinese and Russians are gonna look into similar options. Maybe they can only afford a quarter of a million DC-15s, but they supplement that with a billion rounds of BlasCaps to go in their existing weapons as a budget upgrade. (I know the BlasCap didn't exist then, it's just an example of how things could play out.) Maybe NATO cuts a deal with Salusia for high-tech slugthrowers, accompanied with an agreement to exclusively buy ammo from Salusia.

Now that I think of it, such chicanery is probably one of many indirect causes of the First Contact Wars, as everyone geared up and then a combination of toxic ideology and desire to play with the new toys combined explosively. I mean... you can't tell me the US Government didn't plow the chunk of change they got from the WDF for the US Air Force right back into fancy new upgrades. I bet SubPro sold the Navy a ton of hardware right after that.

-Merc
Keep Rat


#11, RE: BPGD: That Gun
Posted by drakensis on May-27-14 at 02:14 AM
In response to message #10
> I mean... you can't tell me the US
>Government didn't plow the chunk of change they got from the WDF for
>the US Air Force right back into fancy new upgrades. I bet SubPro sold
>the Navy a ton of hardware right after that.

Suddenly I'm imagining someone writing up on Galacticpedia or whatever it's called that the United States of America on planet Earth exports armed forces. Because that year at least, it was a significant blip in the balance of trade.


#12, RE: BPGD: That Gun
Posted by BLUE on Jun-21-14 at 09:23 PM
In response to message #0
Not sure if this should go here or in source material, but went with the easier way.

Kotaku article about collector's Blade Runner gun


#13, RE: BPGD: That Gun
Posted by Peter Eng on Jul-27-17 at 03:25 PM
In response to message #0
Late-arriving observations:

>
>It isn't entirely clear why the elder Inazuma bought the gun,
>since, according to her notes, it didn't actually work at the
>time; its servo-assisted loading mechanism had long since failed, its
>action had seized, and someone had tried to "officially" demilitarize
>it by removing the firing pin and filling the barrel with lead.
>Perhaps she simply wanted a project to fill the time during a
>long-haul hyperflight to the Rim...
>

Given her need to keep focused, it's likely that Azula really did buy it as a time-filler. Rehabilitating a firearm is definitely a "don't screw up" sort of project..

>
>Some time after that, she grew tired of constantly having to hunt for
>and/or scratchbuild its scarce ammunition and converted it into a
>blaster using the MorganArms CCRE-I system.
>

...and so is the CCRE conversion, given the comment on nanofusion breeders.

>
>VES/lts
>

I may be misreading that second set of initials, but it looks like Liara said yes.

Peter Eng
--
Insert humorous comment here.