Nope, definietly not a legend...  TDR/coax based systems are rather common for 
measuring blasts (nuke and otherwise,  but not using Ethernet cards).  
Basically the shock wave crushes the coax and messes up the impedance as it 
propogates.  Results are monitored by TDRs.  And a fun time is had by 
all...Another system uses high speed photography to record the mayhem and work 
out the blast effects.  Million+ frames per second can be achieved. I saw some 
great video of a very large boulder being obliterated.  Cracks that formed in 
well under a millisecond took ages to appear and spread.  The full recording 
took about 15 minutes to play back.  They also had a video of a pipe bomb in 
action.  Such things are like Medusa...  best to watch them a 
mirror.-------------I've heard stories that the TDR feature was used to collect 
timing data on 
some A-bomb tests.  The bomb was at the bottom of a hole.  An ethernet cable 
went down the hole.  I can't remember or reconstruct the details.  I assume 
there was a PDP-11 at the top of the hole.  The idea is something like you 
send a packet to trigger the bomb, and when the bomb goes off, the cable 
vaporizes and is no longer terminated so packets turn into collisions and the 
TDR grabs the time.

It sounds like an urban legend, but it's a fun one.


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