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Navy Railgun Tests Leading to Ship Superweapon by 2020
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<blockquote data-quote="TanisFrey" data-source="post: 5840093" data-attributes="member: 26948"><p>That indicates the navy wants to be able to use a round that is large enough to have a guidance package.</p><p></p><p>Earlier, several of you were talking about recoil. A rail-gun should be able to minimize it. In a traditional gun/cannon/rocket launcher the ammo rests upon the barrel. When it is fired it must over static and dynamic friction of the barrel/rocket tube and the air in the way. The first thing a rail gun does in preparing to fire is to generating magnetic field. This will suspend the round in the middle of the chamber and not touch the "barrel wall" at all. This will eliminate the need for extra force needed to over come it. This is why they are talking much longer ranges then a gun powered system.</p><p></p><p>The other eventual use of this system I see it too fire missiles. Even with mass manufacture of missiles you still get the occasional failer to lunch from the tube or explosion of a missile in the rocket tube. This creates a potential dangerous situation for our sailors. If we have one rail gun that tosses out a missile so that the rocket engine fires in midair. We can eliminate the occasional dangerous misfire and extend the range of the missile in question.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="TanisFrey, post: 5840093, member: 26948"] That indicates the navy wants to be able to use a round that is large enough to have a guidance package. Earlier, several of you were talking about recoil. A rail-gun should be able to minimize it. In a traditional gun/cannon/rocket launcher the ammo rests upon the barrel. When it is fired it must over static and dynamic friction of the barrel/rocket tube and the air in the way. The first thing a rail gun does in preparing to fire is to generating magnetic field. This will suspend the round in the middle of the chamber and not touch the "barrel wall" at all. This will eliminate the need for extra force needed to over come it. This is why they are talking much longer ranges then a gun powered system. The other eventual use of this system I see it too fire missiles. Even with mass manufacture of missiles you still get the occasional failer to lunch from the tube or explosion of a missile in the rocket tube. This creates a potential dangerous situation for our sailors. If we have one rail gun that tosses out a missile so that the rocket engine fires in midair. We can eliminate the occasional dangerous misfire and extend the range of the missile in question. [/QUOTE]
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