Please note that this is the Gundam Wiki's article on Gundarium Alloy; if you are looking for the article on the alloy from Gundam Wing then you should head to Gundanium Alloy. |
Luna Titanium (ルナチタニウム Runa Chitaniumu?),[1] also known as Gundarium Alloy (ガンダリウム合金 Gandariumu Gōkin?)),[2] is a material introduced in the original Mobile Suit Gundam television series and used to construct the famous RX-78-2 Gundam.
Development[]
When the Earth Federation designed the RX-78 series of mobile suits, they also wanted a material that was strong, lightweight and durable for its construction; at that time they did not possess an adequate number of facilities to effect very-large-scale production and maintenance. Titanium isn't considered ideal as it becomes brittle if subjected to large amounts of stress over time as well as being slightly more complicated to work and weld when compared to other alloys like Steel, prompting the engineers to develop a new lightweight alloy that eventually came into being U.C. 0064, known as Luna Titanium. After the One Year War, this alloy was renamed Gundarium in honor of the RX-78-2 Gundam and its pilot's exploits during the war.
Derivatives[]
- Gundarium α
- Gundarium α (Alpha) is the first of three reproduced Luna Titanium alloy variants developed at Axis and in secret by the Anaheim Electronics company. It was known to have been used in the construction of the MSA-003 Nemo. This alloy is essentially an exact reproduction of the original Luna Titanium alloy used in the V Project prototypes.
- Gundarium β
- Gundarium β (Beta) is the second of three reproduced Luna Titanium alloy variants developed at Axis. It represents the intermediate stage of development between Gundarium α and Gundarium γ (Gamma).
- Gundarium γ
- Gundarium γ (Gamma) is the third of three reproduced Luna Titanium alloy variants developed at Axis and later given to Anaheim Electronics prior to Mobile Suit Zeta Gundam. Introduced in U.C. 0087, it was lightweight and featured excellent durability, making it widely adopted on second-generation mobile suits used in the Gryps Conflict. The Federation did not know of the existence of this variant until Anaheim Electronics gave them the RMS-108 Marasai as a political gesture.
- Gundarium ε
- Gundarium ε (Epsilon). Developed by Anaheim Electronics, it was essential in the construction of the Epsy Gundam, which used a nuclear pulse propulsion system.
- Gundarium Alloy/Ceramic Composite
- Introduced in the U.C. 120s following the miniaturization of mobile suits. This material added a ceramic composite material similar to the earlier armors used on mobile suits during the mid to late UC 0080s and UC 0090s. With the advent of miniaturized mobile suits in the early U.C. 0100s, multiple mass production suits (such as the RGM-109 Heavygun) could be made out of Gundarium for the price of a single mobile suit of an older design. Unfortunately, the hybridization of Gundarium and Ceramic composites degraded the protective qualities of Gundarium. This meant that while mass-production mobile suits were armored with Gundarium instead of a cheaper Titanium/Ceramic composite; they were more vulnerable to physical attacks, whereas the older prototype mobile suits with pure Gundarium armor were almost impervious to attacks that would severely damage or destroy the former.
Effectiveness[]
The Luna Titanium armored RX-78-2 Gundam was almost unstoppable in combat. 120mm and 90mm shells fired from the MS-06 Zaku II's machine guns have almost no effect on it. Physical attacks such as blunt force had little effect as well. During a fight with the Gundam on Luna II, Zeon pilot Char Aznable said that he "hadn't seen a mobile suit that could survive the beating I'm giving it" despite the fact that he had knocked the machine around using melee techniques.
The alloy had some degree of resilience against mega particle weapons as well; following a duel with Zeon's MSN-02 Zeong at A Baoa Qu, the Gundam was shown to only have lost its head, left arm, and part of its right leg. During the events of Operation Stardust, the RX-78GP01 Gundam "Zephyranthes" was sortied hastily, resulting in its near-destruction at the hands of Zeon remnants. However, while the Gundam suffered damage to its head and right shoulder, and lost its left arm and one of its legs, direct hits to the torso from a handheld beam weapon did not destroy it. Another similar case was during the events of Char's Counterattack, in this instance Char's MSN-04 Sazabi was struck by a beam weapon in its midsection, only chipping off a few tiny pieces as a result.
Qualities[]
- Lightweight: the Gundam was taller than the Zeon Zaku by about a meter, but the shorter Zeon mobile suit weighed slightly more than the Gundam.
- Durable: projectile weapons could only scratch the alloy, rendering the machine guns used by Zeon mobile suits useless against the armor. The 360mm Bazooka used by the MS-09B Dom had the ability to do moderate damage due to the large explosive charge, but the shells could easily be evaded at long range.
Disadvantages[]
Despite its effective qualities, Luna Titanium alloy had two major flaws:
- Expensive: The difficulty in processing Luna Titanium alloy, and the high cost of the rare metals used in its production, caused the material to be impractical for mass-production mobile suits, such as the RGM-79 GM. Although the earlier RX-79[G] Gundam Ground Type and the RGM-79[G] GM Ground Type have armor made of Luna Titanium alloy, both mobile suits were produced only in limited numbers, 20 units for the former and about 50 units for the latter.
- Repairs: the unique durability of this alloy troubled Federation mechanics as much as Zeon troops, since expedient repairs that involve steps such as cutting open or welding external armor plating proved impossible using equipment readily available in the field. In effect, the White Base, Jaburo, and Luna II were the only locations that had the facilities required to repair and maintain the V Project prototypes.
Notes & Trivia[]
- A material with the same name also appears in the Future Century and After War timelines, but it is unknown if they have similar properties as the Universal Century's Luna Titanium Alloy.
- A similarly-named alloy known as Gundanium Alloy appears in the series Mobile Suit Gundam Wing. Like Luna Titanium, it is a lightweight yet strong material used to construct Gundams. However, unlike Luna Titanium, Gundanium is shown to be almost completely indestructible and needs to be artificially assembled in space.
- In a very obscure Easter egg in Gundam Wing on a computer screen shown during Quatre's exploration of the Sandrock's development program) Gundanium Alloy is identified as "Gundarium Theta." This could simply be a joke made by the show's producers.
Appearances[]
References[]
- ↑ 『機動戦士ガンダム記録全集』日本サンライズ、1979年12月、134頁。
- ↑ 『ENTERTAINMENT BIBLE .1 機動戦士ガンダム MS大図鑑 PART.1 一年戦争編』バンダイ、1989年2月、46頁。(ISBN 978-4891890063)