Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "دافيدكا" in Arabic language version.
It fired a bomb of nails and metal scrap which exploded with some force and - what was more important - with tremendous noise and fury.
Its effect on the Arabs was sometimes considerable, notably at Safad, where they mistook it for an atomic weapon when they abandoned the city.
It seems that the greatest fear of the Arabs was the fact that most of the people behind the development of America's atomic bomb were Jewish (most notably Einstein and Oppenheimer), and the Arabs had heard a little bit about acid rain. So they assumed the Jews had just set off an atomic bomb, and the rest is history!
It fired a bomb of nails and metal scrap which exploded with some force and - what was more important - with tremendous noise and fury.
They fired a shell made out of water pipes and packed with explosives, nails and bits of scrap metal.
Its effect on the Arabs was sometimes considerable, notably at Safad, where they mistook it for an atomic weapon when they abandoned the city.
The stunned Iraqis in the Allenby Barracks (Jerusalem) shouted over the telephone that the Jews had a weapon like the atomic bomb and begged for help. [As reported to be overheard by a telephone switchboard operator]
It fired a bomb of nails and metal scrap which exploded with some force and - what was more important - with tremendous noise and fury.
Its effect on the Arabs was sometimes considerable, notably at Safad, where they mistook it for an atomic weapon when they abandoned the city.
It seems that the greatest fear of the Arabs was the fact that most of the people behind the development of America's atomic bomb were Jewish (most notably Einstein and Oppenheimer), and the Arabs had heard a little bit about acid rain. So they assumed the Jews had just set off an atomic bomb, and the rest is history!
It fired a bomb of nails and metal scrap which exploded with some force and - what was more important - with tremendous noise and fury.
Its effect on the Arabs was sometimes considerable, notably at Safad, where they mistook it for an atomic weapon when they abandoned the city.