Jak Sandrow
"Nobody cares for the woods anymore."

OUT OF CHARACTER INFORMATION
- Intent: A personal weapon for Jak Sandrow
- Image Source: Me, I made this.
- Canon Link: Uses this tech: http://starwars.wikia.com/wiki/Plasticene_thermite_gel
- Restricted Missions: N/A
- Primary Source: N/A
- Manufacturer: JSA
- Model: JSA-THERMSLICE
- Affiliation: Jak Sandrow
- Modularity: No
- Production: Unique
- Material: Durasteel, heat-resistant coating (cortosis), plasticene thermite gel
- Classification: Sword
- Size: One-handed
- Length: 1.3 m
- Weight: 3 kg (1 kg is thermite)
- Thermite gel bonded to a durasteel blade
- Sizzle Sizzle - Thermite does not stop burning. It cannot be extinguished once activated. It only stops burning once the fuel source has been dissipated (after 90 seconds)
- Flame On - Burning at very high temperatures, the sword is able to cut through thin layers of durasteel (speeder panels and door locks), as well as organic, unprotected material with ease.
- One Use - This sword has a one-time-use 90-second burn. After that is done, the sword itself is structurally compromised and will require significant time to reshape, re-harden, and refuel. Until that is done, it is no more than a floppy piece of misshapen metal.
- Flame Off - While thermite gel burns in excess of 5000 C, the gel used here has a much slower burn, and as such, has a lower temperature. It is simply unable to cut through durasteel, and will only melt through the thinnest durasteel panels (speeders, locks, etc).
The thermite blade works like a lightsaber blade for dummies. While rather formidable-looking (sparking and flaming as thermite will do), it is nowhere near as powerful a tool as a lightsaber. It is unable to cut through most durasteel plating, and can only melt through the thinnest possible platings. However, as an inexpensive, spitballs-and-space-tape weapon, it does its job - look scary and hurt things.
The cortosis weave helps the weapon keep mostly intact after the burn is finished, though the 'weapon' can really no longer be useful for much other than a warm club. The same heat that can melt through a thin lock will also wreck the structural integrity of the sword itself. Significant time back at the forge is required to get the lump looking more like a sword and less like a tin stick.