That they are now starting to
brag about it is pretty good confirmation that the technical issues are now
resolved and the weapon is deliverable.
I say this because every high school student taking physics for the past
half century has known of the possibility but also knew that the rails were
destroyed in the process. A huge issue
that needed to be worked around.
Otherwise the weapon is still a
conventional ballistic system with massive range and fits well with naval
doctrine. Recall that the ballistic option
effectively disappeared for the Navy during WWII. Today the capital ship is an aircraft carrier
for good reason. This is not going to
change as the air footprint is huge. A
rail gun does provide escorts with a complimentary foot print that was missing.
More interesting such a weapon
would act as an excellent anti missile system against any intercontinental missiles
that are incoming and may even find its way into space on that mission. Depending on range, the navy could even take
on that role as they have mobile launch platforms and any attacker must pass
over coasts.
Railguns: The Navy's 'ultimate superweapon'
This terrifyingly powerful gun can shoot a 40-pound metal slug up to
5,600 miles per hour. See it in action
POSTED ON MARCH 1, 2012, AT 4:30 PM
The Navy's electromagnetic railgun prototype can fire metal projectiles
like this with 32 times the force of a car traveling at 100 miles per hour.
Photo: Facebook/Office of Naval Research
The video: After six years of development and at least $240
million, the U.S.
Navy's futuristic electromagnetic railgun is one
big step closer to reality. The Office of Naval Research (ONR) is now
test-firing a working prototype of the weapon that's small enough to fit on a
warship. Using electric pulses, not chemical explosives, the cannon can
shoot a 40-pound metal slug from
New York to Philadelphia at up to 5,600 miles per hour — more than
seven times the speed of sound — with 32 times the force of a car traveling at
100 miles per hour. (Watch a video below.) "This is the stuff you saw
in movies a couple of years ago — cutting-edge, taking out
the Transformers — and now it's reality," says
ONR chief Adm. Matthew Klunder.
The reaction: Meet "the ultimate superweapon," says
David Woods at Manolith. The railgun is already deadly with these test
projectiles — basically non-aerodynamic hunks of metal — and once the railgun
starts using real ammo, "it could revolutionize the way battles are
fought." But watching this "railgun in action chills me to the
bone," says
Jacqueline Burt at The Stir. "I'm not disputing the incredible
technical achievement this signifies," but I could say the same of the
atomic bomb. Can any good "ever come from creating a weapon of mass
destruction"?
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