LOL at 2000km range it can even be land based. Imagine mount this baby somewhere in Tibet and it can hit every corner of India (not suggesting war just a hypothetical situation). Bad news for countries with limited strategic depth.
Paris Gun 2.0
oh the Chinese might entertain me (by showing what happened to like five-store-building and now a target-barge while hit), but of course they wouldn'tThese are great questions. I hope PLAN people are smart enough to know the answers through tests before they spend the money.
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China is working on a mobile containerized nuclear reactor and is expected to produce a prototype by 2022. I expect the reactor to have power in the area of 5-10 MW. That would enable a 400 MJ EM gun at 30% efficiency to fire once every 2-5 minutes. If equipped with 2 mobile reactors, the time would go down to 1-2 minutes per shot. It's a decent rate for such a long range weapon. The containers would most likely be placed on truck platforms, even if in operation its detached, I would expect it to be movable in short notice.Not really! To get to 2000km you'll need a power station which won't be movable and so is a sitting duck for the missiles coming from the opposite direction, India is a poor example as it has ballistic missiles that will reach 2000km so has the 'strategic depth' to retaliate and neutralise as even one with a poor CEP, a power station is a pretty big fixed target. Hypothetical or not, poor exemplar!
China is working on a mobile containerized nuclear reactor and is expected to produce a prototype by 2022. I expect the reactor to have power in the area of 5-10 MW. That would enable a 400 MJ EM gun at 30% efficiency to fire once every 2-5 minutes. If equipped with 2 mobile reactors, the time would go down to 1-2 minutes per shot. It's a decent rate for such a long range weapon. The containers would most likely be placed on truck platforms, even if in operation its detached, I would expect it to be movable in short notice.
400 MJ / 0.3 = 1333 MJ
1333 MJ / 5 MW = 266 s
400 MJ / 0.3 = 1333 MJ
1333 MJ / 10 MW = 133 s
View attachment 45246
It is merely a thought experiment, operating and moving such a big platform on the Tibetan Plateau would be difficult in reality (but possible). Cost wise it might not be better but might prove to be harder to intercept compared to a ballistic missile, maybe even seemingly less threatening thus lower level of retaliation. The fixed costs are high but if there is high utilisation the lower variable costs might make it reasonable.Well I guess the original author wasn't joking when he said Paris Gun at that rate of fire it would be comparable to the Paris gun, probably looking at half a dozen shots per hour (fire a barrage, dismantle the set up, move, reassemble the setup, fire next barrage) if they get lucky and hit you, radioactive mess in your own territory, besides the terror aspect hardly a realistic 2000 km bombardment weapon, by the time you factor in the cost of the mini reactor is it any cheaper or better than the hundreds of mobile SRBM, MRBMs china already has? You'd be better off putting the whole contraption on a ship and sailing it to where you need to use it than messing around playing lego on the Tibetan plateau.
"...Satellite image of the railgun in 2017..."
how come you quality it as emg?
no power lines leading to the place, nor any compact power store.
emg test firing needs not multiple targets.
more like a penetration test site