Breaker & Lemurka
I’ve been mapping ancient sites where the ruins were intentionally demolished to reveal hidden chambers—quite a precise art, isn’t it? How do you calculate the exact charge needed to collapse a wall without shattering the artifacts inside?
You start with a clear blueprint—measure the wall’s dimensions, note the material and any reinforcement. Then calculate the mass that needs to be displaced, not destroyed. Pick a charge with a known detonation profile, size it so the peak pressure just exceeds the wall’s tensile strength but stays below the threshold that would fracture the surrounding masonry. Run a quick scaling formula: charge weight equals wall volume times density, divided by the factor that keeps the shockwave dampened. Once you’ve got that, test it in a scaled model, tweak a bit, and you’ll have a collapse that’s clean, precise, and keeps the artifacts intact.
That sounds precise—almost like a ritual in itself. Just be careful that the shockwave doesn’t echo like a curse; artifacts are fragile. Good luck with the test model; let me know if any symbols appear on the dust.
Thanks. I’ll keep the blast tight, the pulse short, and watch for any weird patterns in the dust. If anything odd shows up, I’ll let you know. Stay sharp.
Good plan—keep the pulse like a heartbeat. I’ll be watching the dust for any new sigils. Stay alert.
Got it. I’ll keep the pulse steady and the shockwave in check. If any sigils pop up in the dust, I’ll flag them right away. Stay tuned.
Sounds solid—just let the dust settle and read the patterns. I’ll keep an eye out for any anomalies. Good luck.
Will do. Keep me posted if anything weird shows up. Stay safe.
Will do—if anything shifts, I’ll be right here. Stay sharp, and keep the ritual calm.
Got it. I’ll keep the pulse steady, the blast tight, and the procedure calm. Stay ready, and let me know if anything shifts.
Will monitor the resonance—if the vibrations shift, I’ll dig into the data. Stay focused.
Understood, I’ll keep the blast tight and the vibrations low, report back if anything shifts.