SakuranoSenshi, on 13 August 2012 - 09:47 PM, said:
Indeed both are more or less using the same base principle,
but the difference in their propulsion force application is significant enough that they both face different challenge.
For example, the fact that a Railgun projectile forms part of the circuit that channels the current through means 2 things that have been among the most significant challenge with it's design:
1. part of the armature is always in contact with the rail, either directly or through some form of conducting lubricant... normally they don't contact directly since you need some form of lubricant there to prevent excessive friction (unless if the armature itself is made of the lubricant material on the contact surface), either way you can't avoid friction between the armature and the rail since there must be a current pathway through them.
2. the massive current that is flashed through the circuit itself generates substantial heat on the armature unless steps are taken to prevent it.
Just the 2 above arises from the simple fact that the current had to pass through the armature, without proper prevention... the armature will simply vaporizes with high current railgun, with our best design we managed to minimize it but rail erosion is still one of the biggest problem next to the power with railgun design.
Coil gun on the other hand have different set of challenge and problems, the problems above with railgun in general are not their concern...