This is a bear trap, so you can get an idea of how big it is. Usually you need specials tools to set them because you can't do it by hand. What ever is caught in it is going to be crushed. Broken bones, pulverized blood vessels and veins, destroyed muscle tissue.
Regardless of the style of foothold trap, opening the jaws is accomplished basically the same for all. You must compress the levers or springs on either side of the trap jaws with your hands or feet to open the trap. to the levers or springs as closely to the jaws as possible for the most leverage.
They push up, and that upward motion pushes the clamps together and simultaneously locks the jaws closed, preventing the bear (or you) from pulling them apart. To set the trap or release it, all you need to do is push both of those springs down at the same time. Then the clamps will just fall open.
"If you step in one, for sure, it is going to hurt," Rich Butera of Oneida Victor Animal Traps, which manufacturers bear traps. "Depending on how big you are, the initial hit could definitely crack something. Will it chop off your foot? No."
An unarmed human could not bear a grizzly bear in a fight.
In this fight, the grizzly bear would attack a human like any other animal. The bear would charge the human, knock it over, and deliver a violent flurry of bites, slashes, and more to kill the person.
But yes, a lucky human could kill a bear with bare hands by being fortunate enough to land on the bear just right after falling from a great height. Seriously, one's only hope would be to break the larynx with a lucky blow and have the bear choke to death. Difficult to hit a small target on a well-protected neck.
You'd get trapped, you'd be in a lot of pain, and you'd have a very serious leg wound, possibly including broken bones. This is one reason not to attempt to trap bears—the trapper doesn't really know who or what will step in the trap. Could you die from getting caught in a bear trap? Absolutely.
In the wild, a bear trap is a steel contraption with sharp teeth that can clamp a bear's paws. Arguably more painful is the stock market's version — a rally that tricks investors into buying when it seems a down market is bouncing back, only for prices to sink lower.
You cannot escape with a reverse bear trap on your head at all. It will immediately activate and sacrifice the survivor, including hatch/exit gates.
When a creature gets trapped, durability slowly depletes at a rate of one unit per eight seconds. With a total durability of one hundred this takes some time (800 seconds or 13.33 minutes) to let go, unit can also be repaired with a captive in its jaws.
BUTTERFLY EFFECT UPDATE (Open Bear Trap): If you decide to keep all of Mike's fingers, Mike will end up destroying the machete, which he won't be able to use in Chapter 9. BUTTERFLY EFFECT UPDATE (Amputate Fingers): If you amputate Mike's two fingers, he'll still be able to keep the machete intact for use in Chapter 9.
There is a debate about whether these traps are humane or not; the actual traps usually do not harm the animal (some newer traps are padded or laminated to avoid even breaking the skin) but in some animal species, the animal will attempt to chew its own leg off to escape from the trap.
Typically, bear traps occur after a rapid price increase in a stock. Price action makes it look like the stock is about to reverse and give up its recent gains, causing bearish traders to step in and short sell the stock.
Sure, it's possible, but highly unlikely. Even if you did manage to kill the bear, you would most likely end up dead. Because to get close enough to use the knife, the bear would also be able to use it's claws and strength to take you apart before you were able to kill the bear.
Each trap is numbered on the pan. Weighs over 30 pounds.
Bear Trap is a unique weapon, available to players at level 11 and above, that has 6 grades.
Though some steel-jaw traps are padded, they still leave animals immobile, exposed, and helpless. Animals caught in these traps are terrified and in excruciating pain. They are forced to suffer just so that their head can be mounted on a wall and their fur can be made into a coat.
Bear traps are designed to catch and hold the leg of a bear, not cut it off. Your leg may be badly bruised, but it should not be severely injured or amputated. Attempt to move your foot and toes to determine if you still have circulation and to check for tendon and muscle damage.
“What would a bear trap do to a human? — A bear trap would do enough damage to a human leg to allow the victim to easily sever whatever remains stuck in the trap in order to get free. A farmer who got his hand caught in a trap and after 2 days of being held fast, he took out his pocket knife and cut held body part.”
Although a silverback gorilla is very fast, quite strong, and has a longer arm span, it is unlikely that a silverback could defeat the much larger and faster grizzly bear in a fair fight. The one advantage that a Silverback might have is the enormous strength of its muscles.
With the bear's massive body, superior muscle, surprising speed and evolutionary armory, there really isn't any way a gorilla wins the fight. Every attempt it makes would be thwarted by at least one of these factors.
Kendell Cummings did not think he would fight a bear on a weekend and live to tell the story. But when a grizzly bear attacked his wrestling teammate Brady Lowry, Cummings leaped in to save him.