Andrew we're not knee jerking, Were looking at it impartially. Your argument is that the US should stick to VLS rather than adopt Railguns, and then you point to the PRC and Say they have the edge.
But Here is the thing andrew,
1st this is the US Military thread.
2nd the US is very capable and the USN is not resting on it's laurels. The USN is the most powerful navy in the world bar none and they have remained that way by shaping the technologies of the naval arena not by denying them.
In terms of EM technology development, remember that China leads the US in the civilian deployments.
Maglev and Railgun tech are not one and the same, they are similar but just because you have one does not mean you have a easy time with the other, after all The US has Railguns working large scale right now.
despite your Claims only the US has displayed nearly Prime time Railguns.
Despite what you think, the US has actually accumulated a large stockpile over the past 40 years of VLS cells and missiles.
True and they will continue such until said missiles are truly obsolete. But just because the USN and DOD have stockpiles doesn't mean they should deny an advantage. Infact the USN deploying said rail guns ahead of other nations would be an advantage, as well they are rushing to build one and two to deploy the USN Could respond with a dozen by establishing that technology by changing the game you set the rules.
What do you call the large numbers of expensive VLS modules located on the vast fleets of Los Angeles submarines, Ticonderoga cruisers and Arleigh Burke destroyers which are over 20 year old?
To date Railgun tech has not been applied to Submarines, I am not sure it could be.
Railguns propel the projectile to hypersonic velocities in the Air. Under water you have to consider the Density of water which would likely make a railgun impractical due to hydroshock.
IE VLS will remain, Bonus point Los Angeles Class is slated for retirement. of the 62 built over 30 will have left service by the end of this year. as newer Virginia Class Come online and again VLS will remain.
Tico's are good boats but dated already they should have had a replacement program for a full cruiser, instead they will use Block III Arleigh Burke which will be new build Burkes which may have railguns and VLS.
And yes, missiles do have a shelf-life, say 20 years. But China only really started building reasonably large numbers of missiles some 10 years ago.
So on balance, making existing missile technology obsolete works in China's favour.
Again Why one or the Other? the Railgun systems are good but, there are some needs and wants where VLS will remain. Why? Because For all the advantages it offers it's simply a system to be integrated. A rail gun round once fired cannot be pushed to new targets Modern Cruise missiles can. a Railgun round is on a set trajectory and cannot hunt targets on it's own, a modern Antiship missile can. a Railgun round is more or less a solid round, A missile can be configured with any number of warhead types.
And Also Yes the PRC should have less numbers of Missiles
in theory then the US fine. ( Why in theory? Because Time does not make all things you also have to consider industry base and importation as well. ) But again this is the US military thread
and I reiterate there is no hard evidence of any nation other than the US being at fieldable railguns yet.
I agree that defensive railguns will likely replace short range SAMs, and not bigger SAMs tasked with ABM or long-range air defence.
But remember that the cost equation would be for big expensive SAMs shooting down muchcheaper incoming missiles or railgun projectiles, which is inherently a losing proposition.
actually the other way around. The Railgun is aimed to engage larger expensive missiles well cheaper shorter range systems like lasers and SAMs and Guns will remain for some time.
And if railguns become very effective air defence weapons as the US hopes they can be, then it makes no sense to launch long range offensive missiles which will be far more expensive and few in number.Therefore we end up with defensive railguns versus offensive railguns, which would resemble a nasty short range artillery duel
That depends on the mission, Not every mission is based on conventional war and not every battle boils down to cannon. First Assumption is that every mission would fall into the scope of the railgun second is that you can aim them.
small hypersonic projectiles are going to be hard to find and counter especially if you have mobility. If you place a Rail Gun emplacement on a fixed position it's a fixed target. If you place one on a ship it's a moving target. in either case to use that weapon you need to find it's target. A railgun can be pointed but it can't seek. Other system have to do that.
And I don't know why you disagree with airborne platforms being at an advantage with respect to railguns. It's common sense to say that railguns require a lot of energy, which presumably would come from burning kerosene or diesel. However, this has a fairly low energy-density for the weight, when compared to the requirements of a railgun.
So what sort of platform has the most access to this sort of energy? It should be obvious that aircraft don't have access to as much fuel as a ship or land-based vehicle.
Advantage moving target, Advantage can maneuver, Advantage evolving technologies.
BAE Systems proposed mounting a railgun on a future ground based fighting vehicle. That means they could do the same for a aircraft. Aircraft fly using engines based on gas turbine technologies that burn kerosene-based fuels. That same root technology is used in naval shipping and industrial power generation.
All it needs is a means to hold the charge.
I also don't know why you bring up the A-10, because it is pretty useless in the Western Pacific due to its short-range and is not applicable in a naval-air scenario.
And you mentioned the Patriot missile, Which is not used by the Navy it's used by the Army and not in service having been replaced by the PAC3 system. If a Airborne Rail system were introduced it would be in next gen systems like the Sixth generation fighter program and other next gens. Blue used the A10 as a frame of reference for "Future attacker planes" which could have longer ranges and all kinds of confrontations.
Additionally if you noticed me chopping out bits of your post's there is a reason for that
Read the rules of the Forum.
under forbidden topics
- No "what if" discussion about war, particularly nuclear war, between China and other nations, or between any nations.