CaveMan, on 05 November 2011 - 02:03 AM, said:
Just be careful not to be hit by your own rounds when they circle the planet and come back down from orbit.
I LOL'ed.
CaveMan, on 05 November 2011 - 02:03 AM, said:
This is to say nothing of the recoil involved. A 125kg Gauss slug that was projected to Mach 40 over a 4m barrel would require an acceleration force of 2.72 giganewtons and a total impulse of 1,650,000 kg-m/s. Thanks to the law of conservation of momentum and Newton's third law, your 100-ton BattleMech would be accelerated in the opposite direction by 16m/s. I.e., it would fly backward by 6 hexes.
Correct me if I'm wrong, but there shouldn't
be any recoil on a Gauss slug? Isn't it propelled out of the weapon by magnetic accelleration down the length of the barrel? Basically being "sucked out" the business-end, rather than being blown out like AC shells, hence no recoil?
CaveMan, on 05 November 2011 - 02:28 PM, said:
A Gauss rifle projectile going Mach 70 (24,000 m/s) would impact with something like 36 GJ, or the approximate energy of 8.6 tonnes of TNT.
And that's assuming it somehow didn't vaporize from friction with the air before reaching the target. Military fighter jets have titanium leading-edges just to keep from burning up at paltry Mach 3+ speeds. A ferrous-nickle slug doesn't stand a chance at Mach 70.
Alizabeth Aijou, on 05 November 2011 - 02:39 PM, said:
Bottom line is still that the slug travels fast enough to justify it being a hitscan weapon.
Bingo and +1 internets.