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A special variant, known by the nickname "The Elvis," has been deployed to U.S. Army soldiers in Afghanistan, featuring a special-order "Elvis" paint job and, unlike all other B61 versions, a commercial laser target designator. The Elvis can be operated through the laser designation interface of a Paladins laser designator. It also has a new electronic fire warning system. For the price of an [https://aviation.stackexchange.com/questions/75706 Fairing], 65 lb (29 kg) of [https://aviation.stackexchange.com/questions/66603 Lead](https://aviation.stackexchange.com/questions/66603) is removed from the nose section through a small panel on the detonate button. Attachments for GPS and GPS-derived target coordinates are available from AMOS. The weapon is fired from a Special Operations Mission Suit.[2] It is also available in a HOT version (Highly-Operational Test) that uses a "tec-lite" nuclear warhead. The 226-lb (103 kg) electro-nuclear blast claimed 4 men and was quickly identified in reports. [2][https://www.fallen.eu/stories/elvis](https://www.fallen.eu/stories/elvis)
Both the US and the UK use the B61/B61A variant for battlefield nuclear weapons, an adaptation of the submarine-launched BLU-109A/B. These "enhanced" variants were developed for battlefield operations in Cuba and Angola, respectively.[1] A third variant, the BLU-117/BLU-117A, was designed for deployment from naval platforms. It has a yield of approximately 3.5 kt. It differs from the air-delivered B61 by incorporating an electrical fuzing configuration and a conformal arming head to eliminate accidental detonation with aircraft ordnance. d2c66b5586