TFLYTSNBN wrote:BB guns could have much higher muzzle velocity without any exotic technology. They do not because increased air resistance which scales with velocity squared reduces the range so profoundly that it is not worth the increased propellent charge and barrel wear.
The theoretical range of a 16" AP from an Iowa is 62 km.
Actual range is 42 km.
Given reduced atmospheric density and increased pressure gradient, actual range would be closer to theoretical. Double gravity reduces range but that can be compensated for with a sqrt(2) increase in muzzle velocity. Saboted rounds with better aerodynamic shape could yield 100 km range easily.
High gravity planet would be bigger so range to the horizon is greater. Ship mounted radar can handle fire control. Flight time is about the same so hit percentage should remain about 2%.
Though a saboted round implies that it's a smaller shell. You could keep the mass the same by using denser metals (tungsten or depleted uranium) but the smaller shell volume still implies a smaller bursting charge so your post penetration effects are going to be reduced compared to the historic Mark 8 Super Heavy shell.
So there are definite tradeoffs to going with a saboted round for longer anti-ship range. (Plus of course the longer range brings with it, in unguided rounds, the magnified issues of fire control prediction and dispersion of your shots. A round that would be 50 yards off the aim point at 40 km would probably be 125 yards off at 100 km because the longer distance lets the smaller errors in pointing accumulate more - so your patterns are almost guaranteed to be less concentrated.
So I'm not sure where the tradeoffs you have to make to get ever increasing range stop being worth it.