mike wightman
SOC-14 10K
Knife-missile anyone???
While generally true for firearms at every TL, smaller bullets at hypersonic velocity could dramaticly increase magazine capacity and the G11 demonstrated the concept of multiple shots within a single recoil.Originally posted by Bill Cameron:
Gents,
As with fighter jets, human physiology is the limit here and I'd say we'd pretty much reached it already with handguns and small arms. Newton's Second Law can't be cheated. There is only so much recoil the human body can take while still using a firearm effectively.
Blue,Originally posted by Blue Ghost:
...would say a Desert Eagle look like a Desert Eagle, or pump shotgun look like a pump shotgun?
Originally posted by Bill Cameron:
Of course, in the 57th Century self-propelled and even self-aiming(!) small arms projectiles may be the norm.
And with a field with that much juice can you imagine how it would interact with other things like hemoglobin?Originally posted by Anthony:
Gauss weapon designs generally use saboted ammunition; the sabot is something that interacts strongly with a magnetic field, the projectile is not.
Even ignoring that, the energy requirement for a magnetic field is linear in volume. A shielding field is at least 100,000x the volume of a gauss rifle field.
Not at all. Or not in the way you are thinking at least. Haemoglobin certainly has iron in it, but so do a lot of other compounds that don't interact significantly with magnetic fields.And with a field with that much juice can you imagine how it would interact with other things like hemoglobin?
Originally posted by veltyen:
The kind of field Arthur was envisioning seemed to me more powerful by a few orders of magnitude ( magnit-tude get it!For a simple analogy, look what you can put in an MRI safely. Anything on that list will be fine near a strong magnetic field.) than an MRI. If you shoot through the tunnel of an MRI I'm pretty sure the bullets are not going to deviate,(possibly ruin an expensive bit of medical imaging equipment though) but the EM field Arthur was talking about will pull them off course. Sort of like comparing a zippo lighter to an acytelene torch.
Originally posted by Blue Ghost:
But we're talking about hurling needles, not compressed gas containers... aren't we?![]()
The key word there is '3 kilogram'. Get a 3 kilogram object up to 20 m/s and it's moving at lethal velocity. Applying a 20 m/s delta-V to a gauss bullet has no meaningful effect on its lethality.Originally posted by Arthur hault-Denger:
I dunno. If a magnetic field 60 times greater than that of the nickel-iron core of a size 8 planet's can launch a 3 kilogram (6.5 pound) steel oxygen tank from the doorway of the MRI room to lethal velocity, I'd have to imagine it might have all sorts of other non-medical applications.![]()
Originally posted by Anthony:
Applying a 20 m/s delta-V to a gauss bullet has no meaningful effect on its lethality.