Corolinth wrote:
Diamondeye wrote:
Not yet. This is still a developing weapon, and that's one of the major problems that still needs to be overcome.
I find this rather surprising, considering the entire weapon is a magnetically propelled salt shaker. There are frictionless HVAC systems which use magnetic fields to hold up and turn fan blades, without needing any axles or bearings. These have no real application in commercial and industrial HVAC, because it takes more energy to generate the magnetic fields than you would lose due to friction. The machine was developed not to be more efficient, but to reduce noise.
The developer was the United States Navy. I'm not sure when exactly they were developed. At the time, it sounded like it was Cold War technology.
I'm a little surprised that the Navy can hold a big fan blade in the air and make it turn, but can't do the same with a railgun bullet.
I believe you are talking about magnetic bearings, which are currently used in a lot of applications, including chillers. The fans still have shafts, its just those shafts are held in place within the collars by magnetic forces rather than physical bearings.
The difficulty with adapting this solution to rail guns probably stems from the manner in which the projectile is moved and the fast pole switching to attain the speeds required, whereas the magnetic bearings don't need to change poles, they constantly repulse in 360 degrees. I can see a lot of difficulty in trying to use a binary system to hold an object in a static location on one axis, spin it about that axis and then move it along another axis all at the same time.