Relax wrote: Now back to big GUNS that go BOOM! Personally, I would have loved to see Saddam Hussein's 4ft bore gun! None of this wimpy limp wristed 16", 12", or 8" popsqueekers...
tlb wrote:The problem with that gun and the WWII German gun it was based on it is that the direction of fire is set at the point of construction. Makes it impractical, unless your enemy is a single small country. Also means it cannot hide from an air attack.
Relax wrote:Steerable shells my friend. Steerable shells. When you go exoatmospheric... well, lets just say, steering hundreds of miles is fairly easy. And in a modern war, everything is vulnerable to air attack. We can tell that there hasn't been a true peer power war as defense capabilities are so far behind the offensive capabilities it is ludicrous.
You are right and I did think about that, but where you are shooting will still be forward of the gun; I am not sure if you can get much more than 30 degrees off bore, since much of the travel is outside the atmosphere. 100 miles to the side at a 200 mile range is 30 degrees; that is a big area, but leaves as much as 300 degrees in the clear.
Yes, everything is vulnerable to air attack; but something that is just an enormous piece of immobile pipe is more vulnerable than most. In addition to development problems that is why the V3 cannon never fired in WWII, although I read that smaller versions of the gun did see limited action.
The inventor claimed the Babylon gun was intended to launch satellites, and it is a matter of conjecture who had him killed (but there is prime candidate).
Edit: Actually I made a trig error - the angle is closer to 27 degrees for the lengths I stated. If 200 miles were the hypotenuse, then I would have been right.