For this test, Rusty really needed a working lightsaber. Unfortunately, he didn't have one, and couldn't make one in the traditional sense.
Modern lightsaber design depended almost entirely on the builder's connection to the Force. As Rusty understood from his studies of publicly available texts on the matter, the Jedi or Sith in question would often take several days just preparing for the build, meditating and cleansing their minds of anything that wouldn't help them build the blade. Assembly was heavily ritualized, a necessity for the near alchemical melding of machine and Force that produced one of the most efficient and deadly constructions in known civilization. Even relatively pacifistic Jedi built and carried lightsabers, as they were a sign of their connection to the Force and a symbol of their status as much as anything.
Rusty could not call upon the Force. He could no more call upon the arcane powers of the armed mystics that seemed to control the fate of the galaxy than he could stop a star from exploding. He could, however, research.
One alternative to lightsabers was the lightfoil, a lightweight, elegantly balanced variant that even normals could build and use. Unfortunately, lightfoils were often seen as inferior knockoffs. Their focusing crystals tended to be inferior to those favored by Force users, and without the Force to meld components together on a molecular level, they lacked anything even close to the power or efficiency of a true lightsaber.
For testing purposes, that simply wouldn't do.
Some digging had turned up something that Rusty had actually found quite useful: early lightsabers were, for all practical intents and purposes, siege weapons. They were large, cumbersome, and inherently unstable. As such, Force users tended to stick with traditional blades imbued with the Force until some enterprising soul figured out how to make them more practical.
Rusty might not be able to build something he could use in a fight, but he could [bleep] sure build a siege weapon.
And so, after months of work, the test saber was born. It was large, about a cubic meter, and weighed over 100 kilograms. Much of that weight was armor; it wouldn't do to have a testing tool that could be disabled by a poorly placed bullet. Internally, it held a power generator salvaged from an E-web, as well as several capacitor banks. When activated, the cooling system was far and away the loudest part. The [bleep] thing sounded like an old diesel groundcar engine. The pumps had to be massive in relation to the rest of it to deal with the massive amounts of waste heat produced by the beam.
The beam itself was bright red, and a little on the unstable side, since he had salvaged the focusing crystals from one of his myriad Sith kills over the centuries. Without the Force, Rusty couldn't chase down the harmonics that gave it that little bit of a wobble, as none of his equipment was sensitive enough to detect it. As a result, it usually shut itself off after about 30 seconds, and the crystals had to be realigned before each use.
Honestly, the thing was such a pain to use, the Shard didn't break it out unless it was absolutely necessary. Today, however, it was.
After about an hour of tinkering, all the indicators were in the green. Rusty set the activation timer for three minutes, which would give him plenty of time to make it to the firing point some 25 meters away. He hustled back to the firing line and loaded the first round into the rifle. His weapon of choice was a big bolt action .50 cal that weighed well over 20 kilograms. It was a beast of a gun, 130 centimeters long, with a barrel heavy enough to handle nearly any load he cared to put through it. For today's test, he had it attached to a tripod that would ensure absolute stability and perfect aim. He dialed the T&E mechanism in to the precise point of aim required for the test, the exact center of the blade.
Once the three minutes were up, the test saber coughed to life with a roar. The brilliant crimson blade spat out harshly from the emitter, casting a hateful red glow over the back of the firing range.
Rusty hated that color.
After taking a second to make sure that his aim was on, the gunsmith pulled the trigger.
The recoil was enough to slide the tripod back a good three centimeters, the metal feet throwing up sparks against the duracrete floor. From the other end of the room, there was a brilliant, blinding flash as the bullet struck the blade, and the sharp metal ping of impact as what was left of it struck the metal backstop.
The blade flickered and died, right on schedule, and Rusty stood up from behind the weapon. From what he could tell, the extra density of the iridium rounds, combined with the high powder load he thought might be necessary to force them down the barrel were responsible for the recoil. He'd need to reduce the powder load by about a third to bring it back down to acceptable levels.
Even then, this wouldn't ammo for the faint of heart or weak of wrist. He was reasonably certain he could get it down to pistol size, but that would still be the equivalent of a magnum or P++ round. Not a problem for a professional shooter, but definitely enough of one that the hobbyist would be scared away. That was fine by him. Most custom home defense rounds were much more harsh than their target counterparts, and no one bothered to shoot them unless they really needed to.
Once he cleared the weapon and made his way back to the target, the Shard couldn't help but pump his fist triumphantly. The paper target on the other side of the blade had two angry, scorched, and irregular holes in it, with about 20 centimeters spread. He'd have to check the high speed camera to be sure, but he was reasonably certain the bullet had performed as anticipated.