Well...Originally posted by Uncle Bob:
Which rulebook says "recoilless"?
Book 1-3 didn't have a Gauss
Book 4 Does not say it is rcoilless.
MT?
TNE?
T4?
T20?
Who Goofed?
I am not going to hold you to that 1.5%, Keklas, since two rounds of the same brand of ammunition rarely manage that, and I wouldn't call the recoil of a 22 LR a jolt, nore of a kiss. I presume you are talking about a 3 g projectile at about 350 m/s, for about 175 J/rd.Originally posted by Keklas Rekobah:
I've fired a real-life 'gauss rifle' that had a similar muzzle velocity of a regular twenty-two calibre 'squirrel gun'. The round itself was also of similar size and mass.
The recoil of the gauss rifle felt more like a sustained surge than the jolt of the squirrel gun, even though the rounds left the barrels at the same speed.
By 'similar', I mean that the values were within 1.5% of each other.
(Hmm... 'Slug Throwers'... 'Squirrel Guns'... I wonder what the damage matrix looks like when the projectile is a small, slimy mollusc or a small, bushy-tailed rodent...?)
Nope sorry, wouldn't help. All you'd be doing is eliminating some friction during firing but as I understand it that's already a part of the design. It's not the 'weight' (as in a downward force due to gravity between two masses) but the acceleration of the mass (bullet) at the target that generates the recoil (an equal and opposite force). The maglev train is similar to the bullet in a gauss gun, except it never leaves the barrel (track). The maglev part is designed just to reduce the rolling friction to some negligable fraction, in fact it is still in contact with the track guides for control.Originally posted by ChrisR:
Just a thought, but couldn't the gauss rifle (at TL12) be designed to use electromagnetism to reduce the weight of the round of ammunition to negligible, before propelling it at high speed down the barrel? This would surely give very little recoil.
Isn't this similar to a maglev train?
Sounds like the Armbrust...Originally posted by far-trader:
Hmm, I recall playing with FF&S in an attempt to design a recoiless assault rifle, might have been gauss rifle based, I'll have to check my notes. True recoiless rifles are fun toys when you want a big kick in the targets pants with none in your own. Basically you offset the recoil of the 'bullet' with another mass (or several more usually) going the opposite way out the back of the rifle. Some are even designed as closed (or semi-closed?) systems using a hydraulic ram piston iirc. I know I had a link, maybe someone else knows the one I'm thinking of, the name escapes me now.
That's it Uncle Bob, thanks!Originally posted by Uncle Bob:
Sounds like the Armbrust...