Barbed tape or razor wire is a mesh of metal strips with sharp edges whose purpose is to prevent trespassing by or to secure facilities such as prisons where there is a risk of escape. The term "razor wire", through long usage, has generally been used to describe barbed tape products. Razor wire is much sharper than the standard barbed wire; it is named after its appearance but is not razor sharp. The points are very sharp and made to rip and snag clothing and flesh.
The multiple blades of a razor-wire fence are designed to inflict serious cuts on anyone attempting to climb through or over it, which simultaneously gives it a strong psychological deterrent effect. However, it can be circumvented relatively quickly by humans with tools (Bolt cutter being a prominent example). Attempting to get through razor wire without tools is incredibly hazardous and requires a substantial amount of time; thwarting such attempts or giving corresponding security forces more time to respond.
Later versions of this type of barbed wire were manufactured by Germany during the First World War. The reason for this was a wartime shortage of wire to make conventional barbed wire. Therefore, flat wire with triangular cutting edges began to be punched out of steel strips ("band barbed wire"). A welcome side effect was that a comparable length of barbed wire of this new type could be produced in less time. These precursors to NATO wire did not yet have an inner wire for stabilization, were therefore easy to cut with tin snips, and were also not as robust as normal barbed wire. However, they withstood the wire cutters used at the time to cut normal barbed wire, as was common at the front.
An article in a 1918 issue of The Hardware Trade Journal tells the story under the headline: "This Cruel War’s Abuse of Our Old Friend ‘Bob Wire.'" After telling a little about Glidden and his invention, the article goes on as follows: "Quite naturally some animals enclosed by Glidden’s fencing gashed themselves on the barbs. Just as naturally, men and boys tried to climb over or under those fences and had their clothes and flesh torn...These wounds upon man and beast and the suddenness with which Glidden’s barbs halted all living things came to the attention of military men, and the barbed wire entanglement of which we now read almost every day in the war news was born...And it may be said right here that soldiers who have been halted by wire entanglements while making a charge say the devil never invented anything nastier."
Starting in the late 1960s, barbed tape was typically found in prisons and secure , where the increased breaching time for a poorly equipped potential escapee was a definite advantage. Until the development of reinforced barbed tape in the early 1980s (and especially after the September 11 attacks), it was rarely used for military purposes or genuine high security facilities because, with the correct tools, it was easier to breach than ordinary barbed wire. Since then, some military forces have replaced barbed wire with barbed tape for many applications, mainly because it is slightly lighter for the same effective coverage, and it takes up very little space compared to barbed wire or reinforced barbed tape when stored on drums.
More recently, barbed tape has been used in more commercial and residential security applications. This is often primarily a visual deterrent since a well-prepared burglar can breach barbed wire and barbed tape barriers in similar amounts of time, using simple techniques such as cutting the wire or throwing a piece of carpet over its strands.
Barbed tape is also characterized by the shape of the barbs. Although there are no formal definitions, typically short barb barbed tape has barbs from , medium barb tape has barbs , and long barb tape has barbs .
BTO-10 | 2.5±0.1 | 0.50±0.05 | 10±1 | 13±1 | 26±1 |
BTO-12 | 2.5±0.1 | 0.50±0.05 | 12±1 | 15±1 | 26±1 |
BTO-18 | 2.5±0.1 | 0.50±0.05 | 18±1 | 15±1 | 33±1 |
BTO-22 | 2.5±0.1 | 0.50±0.05 | 22±1 | 15±1 | 34±1 |
BTO-28 | 2.5 | 0.50±0.05 | 28 | 15 | 45±1 |
BTO-30 | 2.5 | 0.50±0.05 | 30 | 18 | 45±1 |
CBT-60 | 2.5±0.1 | 0.60±0.05 | 60±2 | 32±1 | 100±2 |
CBT-65 | 2.5±0.1 | 0.60±0.05 | 65±2 | 21±1 | 100±2 |
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