Posts:855 Joined: August 29th, 2013, 5:58 pm
Location: Manchester, UK
Hi youboat,
Can you advise why smoothbores for main armament? I'd been of the understanding that such weapons would be detrimental to accuracy at combat ranges - modern tanks use smoothbore main armament (well, except british ones, anyway) - but that's because they fire APDSFS with fins on the back, and even then, the maximum range is ~4km or so, quite short range for a ship.
Regards,
Adam
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Posts:7510 Joined: July 28th, 2010, 12:25 pm
Location: the netherlands
note that most if not all naval guns are smoothbores. naval guns are closer to artillery guns then to tank guns
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Posts:5376 Joined: July 27th, 2010, 3:02 am
Location: Aalborg, Denmark
I'm pretty sure you mean the opposite.
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Posts:7510 Joined: July 28th, 2010, 12:25 pm
Location: the netherlands
Thiel wrote:
I'm pretty sure you mean the opposite.
ow? I might remember that wrong, but weren't naval guns curved track guns while tanks have linear track guns?
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By track, do you mean the rifling? Because a "curved track" gun would then be a rifled gun, which is indeed what most naval cannons are. Smoothbores (ie no rifling) are what modern not-British tanks use.
Posts:7510 Joined: July 28th, 2010, 12:25 pm
Location: the netherlands
no, I mean the flight pad.
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Posts:658 Joined: March 26th, 2013, 7:44 pm
Location: Nottingham. United Kingdom
i think what ace means is trajectory of the projectile. smooth bore is more of a curved rising and then falling to target trajectory " curved track " were as a rifled gun is more of a direct line of sight to target " Linear Track"
correct me if I'm wrong?