I'm no math whiz...but here's a video of a couple hundred tons at 100mph for perspective.
Like I said: unimpressive.
Maybe they could try and build something similar to the A-10, built around a later smaller more advanced version of this. That would make a terrifying anti-armor plane.
While this looks all well and good, I have a couple problems, namely is the acceleration capable of penetrating armor plated steel ship hulls? If so, then this becomes a great weapon in close support of ships as the magazine can be removed an secondary explosions caused by direct hits could be a thing of the past.
If I'm reading the technology right, basically this is a very high powered catapult, meaning it's fire and forget, straight line trajectory so anti-aircraft and missile defense uses are neigh unto impossible as there would be no way to "direct" the round or have it home like radar, sonor, laser, video and fly by wire munitions.
As a ship to shore weapon, this thing would be devastating against soft (people) and semi soft (light vehicles, minimal armor and light wooden buildings) targets, but my concern is loss of velocity over extended distance. (Obviously they aren't going to release that data until they field it. ) Conventional weapons have given way to ship to shore missiles, so unless they could ensure minimal collateral damage, I don't see this being implemented, by 2020 or any other time.
Naval bombardment in support of a landing hasn't been a Navy tactic for many years, in part because we don't do conventional landings anymore. (though there are three tactical landing craft undergoing sea trials.) but their primary function is helicopter operations for troops and then logistical landings to disgorge vehicles, and materiel.
The military has had to contend with collateral damage reports over the last 40 years, in WWII carpet bombing and strategic bombing while effective also destroyed buildings and killed non-combatants. Something that if happened in a modern assault would be met with a media firestorm. Which isn't a bad thing, it's really cool when you can fire a missile from 25 miles away, fly in through a window and land on a bad guy's desk taking out the building which is oddly located next door to a school, a religious center and an emergency response center all of which didn't feel anything other than a slight tremor and a loud boom.![]()
If I'm reading the technology right, basically this is a very high powered catapult, meaning it's fire and forget, straight line trajectory so anti-aircraft and missile defense uses are neigh unto impossible as there would be no way to "direct" the round or have it home like radar, sonor, laser, video and fly by wire munitions.
So, math whizzes, the article says that one 'megajoule' of kinetic energy is the rough equivalent of a one-ton car travelling at 100mph. So does that mean a 33mj rail-gun is the equivalent of a 33-ton car travelling at 3,300mph or a 33-ton car travelling at 100mph?
If it's just 100mph, then that's not exactly impressive.
But let's crunch some numbers - accuracy in a conventional sense is measured in milliseconds when discussing ship to air, the Phalanx has a radar/sonor/laser tracking system that can lock on, aim and fire several hundred armor piercing HE cannon rounds (automatically) in a matter of seconds in a package that is roughly 60' x 100' of ship space to include gun mount and armory for ammunition storage (its a self contained unit). TFor anti-air/missile, I suspect they're hoping for something like the phalanx system. Railguns should produce less heat per shot and nothing would prevent a "gatling" version other than the power demand.

(Dungeons & Dragons)
Rulebook featuring "high magic" options, including a host of new spells.