Is it a cliché if we don’t take our feet when we really press the mine?
Or are we deceived?
The reality of this situation changes compared to the type and principle of the mine.
In order to understand this event, it is necessary to know more or less how mines work. Mines are divided into land and sea mines. Land mines are explosive mechanisms used in military operations, defense or guerrilla wars.
There are many types of land mines and the working principles are different. The mines interacting with the pressure are triggered when a reasonable pressure is applied, while in some models, when the pressure is applied, a springy mechanism is stretched and when the pressure is removed, the spring triggers the explosion as it returns to its old position.
Most pressure mines explode the moment it is printed.
Therefore, the mines cliché, which does not explode when he does not pull his foot, is not valid in every mine. In particular, the pressure type mines, especially pressure, squeezes a pin or bow system when pressed. As long as the pressure continues, the system remains stable and when you remove your feet, the compressed bow remains free and causes explosion.
The mines known as jumping mines are also sensitive to the pressure, and the moment the mine is pressed, the spring is activated. So the mine explodes within a few seconds without even having to pull your feet.
As you can see, this situation, which is a matter of cinema and series, consists of a cliché together, rather than valid for each mine. The scenarios that we watch as a fiction are only a dramatic state of the truth and expect the savior to write a heroic story.