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nice cannon - 1960's test in navada desert-awsum power
Posted: Thu Jan 26, 2006 2:21 pm
by jrrdw
Posted: Thu Jan 26, 2006 4:08 pm
by dragon finder
i saw that a while ago i think that is a german rail gun but i never knew that a rail gun could use that kind of firepower. that power can tern that sand in to a rough glass :shock
Posted: Thu Jan 26, 2006 5:09 pm
by darkpyro
Posted: Thu Jan 26, 2006 5:19 pm
by drac
dragon finder wrote:i saw that a while ago i think that is a german rail gun but i never knew that a rail gun could use that kind of firepower. that power can tern that sand in to a rough glass :shock
Thats not a rail gun! they didn't even have those back in the 60s.
Posted: Thu Jan 26, 2006 6:00 pm
by dragon finder
oh whel it looked like one im not so good with dates
Posted: Thu Jan 26, 2006 6:05 pm
by saladtossser
how do they film inside an explosion like that?
Posted: Thu Jan 26, 2006 6:09 pm
by dragon finder
are you shure it looks like a smaller black rail gun like this one
http://www.gutenberg.org/files/16598/16 ... y_042m.jpg
but i might not be right cause it's hard to see it in detail
Posted: Thu Jan 26, 2006 7:13 pm
by Atlantis
You guys do realize this is a nuclear artillery gun. The explosion is so big big because the shell IS A FREAKING NUKE. The cameras used radio or wire to send the images to a recorder miles away.
Posted: Thu Jan 26, 2006 7:19 pm
by FiveseveN
A gun on rails is not a railgun
A linear DC motor is a railgun. The germans made two huge cannons, yes, but that is the american 280mm "Atomic Annie". Read all about it here:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuclear_cannon
Posted: Thu Jan 26, 2006 7:28 pm
by Atlantis
I figured it would be obvious, what it was since the link has the words, "atomic bomb" in it. You guys need some common sense. Besides, if this were a rail gun, where are the tracks?
Posted: Thu Jan 26, 2006 9:34 pm
by dragon finder
ok it is a atomic annie and the carrage looks just like a cannon that rolles on rails or a rail gun just smaller
Posted: Thu Jan 26, 2006 9:53 pm
by Atlantis
The reason it rolls back is to absorb the recoil. Kinda like a piston bumper. All artillery uses this technique, not just "rail guns" which usually fire perpindicular to the track.
Posted: Fri Jan 27, 2006 1:45 am
by Brian the brain
Could we make this out of some PVC and a toy train maybe??
MOOOOOHAHAHA!....MOOOOHAHAHAHA...
Posted: Fri Jan 27, 2006 5:25 am
by nicholai
i thought that a rail gun used high voltage and a magnetic projectile accellerated by a rail with the opposite polarity or something like that?
Posted: Fri Jan 27, 2006 5:46 am
by Urban Ninja
Yeah that is how a rail gun works. I would love to make one but SooooO much money to build a decent one.