He gets away far too quickly for grenades to be of any use. You can try shooting him, although this is difficult when you are weaving in and out of traffic. It is best just to negotiate the route, follow him, and then have the shoot out in the park with the rest of the biker gang.
Before and during all combat operations
grenades
Mortars, artillery shells especially shrapnell, hand grenades and rifle grenades.
Yes, grenades were used.
There was a planned Apollo 1 mission, however there was a fire during a routine test a few weeks before launch and all three crew members were killed.
R-77 = Electrode. It is at the Altru Building during a mission called, "Operation Brighton!" I think. It will not be there before the mission.
You have to go directly to the Reaper Base and the suicide mission right after the crew gets captured. if you do any other mission or go to any other planets before the suicide mission, members of your crew will die.
it will be released sometime during the summer and definitely be out before the 10th book on august 31
During WWII, some Japanese army hand grenades were ARMED by tapping it's arming device on the Japanese steel helmet. If you watch closely at some WWII vintage (actual footage) film you'll notice advancing Japanese troops (probably in Manchuria) striking their steel helmets before throwing their grenades. They do this very quickly, and most viewers don't catch it, as it looks to routine, and the narrator mentions nothing of it. But, that's what they're doing alright...arming their grenades, by striking their helmets with them.
It enables them to cause large-scale destruction from a relatively safe distance. In relationship to their destructive power, hand grenades are quite small and thus fairly easy for soldiers to carry.
Apollo 1 was the name of the first mission of NASA's Apollo program. The mission ended when the command module and the crew were destroyed in a fire during a routine test weeks before launch.
Grenades are anti-personnel explosive weapons that get most of their killing power by shrapnel (little pieces of metal packed inside the grenade casing). Grenades are used during wars to take out a group of soldiers. They can do a lot of damage to unprotected skin, unarmored vehicles, and thin sheets of wood or metal. Grenades have a fuse, so it is possible to pick up a grenade and throw it back or away before it explodes. Advancing body armor designs are now able to withstand shrapnel.