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Old 02-04-2008, 04:41 PM
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Here's a gun fer ya...

The Navy gets its first rail gun!

Looks like a good candidate for the door gun on the space shuttle!

Technology at its best!

Popular Mechanics | Erik Sofge | January 17, 2008

For true sci-fi fans, any mention of a real-world rail gun will draw an instant, slightly audible gasp. Instead of relying on chemical propellants -- such as gunpowder -- a rail gun uses magnetic "rails" to launch a solid, nonexplosive projectile at incredible speed. Theoretically, rail guns would be able to precisely strike targets at extreme ranges, and would negate the risks associated with carrying around tons of explosive ammo. More to the point, they're cool-sounding, just like lasers.

Which is why the news that BAE Systems has delivered a functional, 32-megajoule Electro-Magnetic Laboratory Rail Gun (32-MJ LRG) to the U.S. Naval Surface Warfare Center in Dahlgren, Va., is exciting. Installation of the laboratory launcher is currently under way, and according to BAE, this is the first step toward the Navy's goal of developing a tactical 64-megajoule ship-mounted weapon.

The lab version doesn't look particularly menacing -- more like a long, belt-fed airport screening device than like a futuristic cannon -- but the system will fire rounds at up to Mach 8, drawing on tremendous amounts of electricity to generate the current for each test shot. That, of course, is the problem with rail guns: Like lasers, they're out of step with modern-day generators and capacitors. Eight and 9-megajoule rail guns have been fired before, but providing 3 million amps of power per shot has been a limitation. At 32 megajoules, this new system appears to be the most powerful rail gun ever built, and the x is installing additional capacitors at the Dahlgren facility to support it. The planned 64-megajoule weapon, if it's ever built, could require even more power -- a staggering 6 million amps.

According to Dr. Amir Chaboki, the program manager for Electro-Magnetic Rail Guns at BAE Systems, "The power is available. The challenge is how you use it." The Navy’s electrically propelled DDG 100 Destroyer, Chaboki says, is a prime candidate for the final 64-megajoule system. Around 72 megawatts (MW) of the vessel's power can be used for propulsion. But during combat, the destroyer's speed could be brought down, freeing up energy for a rail gun. Chaboki calculates that firing the 64-megajoule weapon six times per minute would require 16 MW of power, which would be supplied by either onboard capacitors or pulsed alternators. The more daunting challenge is the force of the rail gun itself: A few shots can dislodge the conducting rails -- or even damage the barrel of the gun.

While the 32-MJ LRG should start firing soon, it could take another 13 years for a 64-megajoule system to be built and deployed on a ship. The Marines, in particular, are interested in the potential for rail guns to deliver supporting fire from up to 220 miles away -- around 10 times further than standard ship-mounted cannons -- with rounds landing more quickly and with less advance warning than a volley of Tomahawk cruise missiles.

Effective rail guns will require a major breakthrough in materials between now and 2020, to keep the guns themselves from being shredded by each high-velocity barrage. Which means that for now, rail guns are precisely like lasers in one crucial way: They're Holy Grails, irresistible precisely because they're out of reach.
 
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Old 02-04-2008, 05:12 PM
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I saw that on Yahoo news last night, that thing is nuts!
 
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Old 02-04-2008, 07:33 PM
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The idea of the power of a railgun in videogames (i.e. Tribes) brought to real life is surreal!
 
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Old 02-04-2008, 07:37 PM
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I'd like a roof-mounted version for my house please. At least that way we can have a little revenge when the pesky little kids throw eggs at our house (it happens on a bi-weekly basis to us and a neighbor).
 
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Old 02-04-2008, 08:16 PM
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mach 8 = 6,089 mph = 8,930.53333 feet per second
 
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Old 02-05-2008, 12:17 AM
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Umm, anyone else find it ironic that the Navy is experimenting with something with this much electricity?
 
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Old 02-05-2008, 02:28 AM
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Originally Posted by CarbonCycles
Umm, anyone else find it ironic that the Navy is experimenting with something with this much electricity?
Yep. If those damn Russkies hadn't screwed the pooch in Chernobyl I could have had a personal nuke plant on my property.

Bro
 



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