GENERAL DISCUSSIONS

My theory about guns in Firefly

POSTED BY: RINGWRAITH
UPDATED: Wednesday, January 1, 2003 15:21
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Saturday, November 9, 2002 3:49 PM

MARK


Well thank you very much Hobbes... Usually when I post in a forum like this, the very next message is one saying "You're so totally wrong because XYZ"... It's just nice to be agreed with.

I haven't seen safe yet. I download the episodes from my vantage point here in the Uk and so I don't get to see the shows for quite a while... I've got Shindig downloading as we speak.

But Re: the whining from the guns you can hear in some of the earlier episodes, if that's what you mean you can hear in Safe... A whine in electronics usually means a sympathetic vibration in a transformer coil/EM Coil caused by a high-frequency signal. It's why some older household appliances whine a little when turned on.... Now that would be a bad thing in a military rifle... After all, with a regular gun, you can cock the action almost silently, or do it a long way from target... A gun with a whining coil in it would have to be done on the spot, would radiate a detectable signal and would produce a uniform (Same every time the gun's cocked) sound pattern before firing, making it vulnerable to being picked up by enemy listening posts.

There are designs for electrical impulse guns... An Australian guy has built one that can fire at a top speed of 1,000,000 rounds per minute (Although it only has a few hundred in the magazine) but those things are Very difficult to reload at any speed.

To my mind, a whine from a gun means one of two things... Either a switched mode power supply or the breech replaced by a type of Solenoid that uses an EM pulse to throw the bullet. Such a design would obviate the need for brass and propellant, would still produce a big bang as you fired, would be above our tech level but maybe below the level of 2458... It would also partially agree with my "lower tech" hypothesis as the bullets could be anything metallic... Not even having to be ferrous as everyone knows who's seen The Spy Who Loved Me. Although it would still require a whole bunch of those high precision components... Although maybe less than a laser.

Regarding laser-weapons... I see Joss has decreed that they do exist, but have just not shown up yet. Well that agrees with the whole "not developed during the war for good reasons" thing. But I wonder what kind of lasers they will be? Killing beams of rose-tinted death? Or simply a part of a larger whole? Perhaps Joss could be talking about a path-ionization Tazer. It's a weapon the military is working on right now... It uses a laser pulse to ionize a path in the air to the target and then it modulates an electrical current down the path. It gives the weapon a Stun/Kill option, but the gun has no real armour penetration value and could easily be flummoxed by copper-weave body armour. We could build one today, but we can't make the laser small enough. The module required is table-top sized.

This is one model of gun that would be of no use in Vacuum or in explosive atmospheres... I am very surprised we haven't seen more use of non-lethal weapons by the Alliance... At the moment such research is going strong, so how come the big "A" has decided to stick with guns? Why aren't we seeing more bowel-relaxer guns, or stick-foam sprays, fast acting tranquilliser darts or trained bacteria?

Oh well, I'm sure Joss will explain all in good time.

Oh, by the way Hobbes... If you've read 1633 (And I presume 1632) Have you read any of David Weber's Honor Harrington series? If not then you absolutely MUST!!!! Think of it as Firefly with a budget of millions and a lot more warships.




Twelve spheres of unendurable brightness spalled the velvety blackness of space.
The silence on Lester Tourville's flag bridge was absolute
And then the spell was broken as Shannon Foraker looked up from her console from where she had just sent a seemingly innocent command to the main computers of State Security's finest Superdreadnoughts.
"Oops." She said.

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Sunday, November 10, 2002 7:10 AM

HOBBES


Quote:

Originally posted by Mark:
...replaced by a type of Solenoid that uses an EM pulse to throw the bullet. Although it would still require a whole bunch of those high precision components... Although maybe less than a laser.

This is one model of gun that would be of no use in Vacuum or in explosive atmospheres... I am very surprised we haven't seen more use of non-lethal weapons by the Alliance... At the moment such research is going strong, so how come the big "A" has decided to stick with guns? Why aren't we seeing more bowel-relaxer guns, or stick-foam sprays, fast acting tranquilliser darts or trained bacteria?

Oh, by the way Hobbes... If you've read 1633 (And I presume 1632) Have you read any of David Weber's Honor Harrington series? If not then you absolutely MUST!!!! Think of it as Firefly with a budget of millions and a lot more warships.



Alright, a billion points to respond to...

So nailgun/railgun tech yes? We're working on it now, the Army has some test units I belive.

Well now would you expect the KGB or Gespato to use nonlethal weapons? That's the image the Alliance is projecting so I'm not really suprised by the lack of nonlethal weapons. Unless of course they need someone alive, maybe then we will see some tranks/foam sprays/whatever.

As regards the lasers they better not be visible outside the atmosphere :)

As for David Weber I do belive I've read every book he has (with the last four or five Honors in hardcover) and wait for more :)

You read In Death Ground (and Crusade, and the first one)? I really would like more books in that series (the sequel to IDG was too one-sided to enjoy).



-------------------------------------------------
May the road rise to meet you.
May the wind be always at your back.
May you be in heaven an hour before
The Devil knows you’re dead.

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Sunday, November 10, 2002 8:31 AM

MARK


Hobbes:
I've read almost every DW book except for On Death Ground and The Shiva Option... I didn't much care for all those books he wrote with Steve White... Although they did give me a new appreciation for the song 'Mr. Zoot Suit'.

That's a point... Are we going to see powered combat armour in Firefly? I doubt it, but it'd be cool.

The Gestapo using non-lethal weapons? Sure! You can't torture information out of a corpse... Plus there's the whole problem of firing a projectile weapon inside a space-vehicle. The crew of the Carrion-nest were killed when Jayne's rounds punched through their window... Wouldn't it be more sensible to use non-lethal or at least non-penetrating weapons in a place where a stray round could kill you all?

Regarding the nailgun/railgun arrangement... it's not quite the same technique... Nailguns tend to use compressed air to drive a nail, whereas a railgun contains two... Well... Rails. A surge of energy is put into the rails which throws an arm forward through a magnetic field. In this case, the gun is simply a small cluster of core-aligned superconductor coils. Current railguns (Which I've known people to build in their garages) have the rails extending the length of the barrel. This would have to be much more compact.

Oh, by the way... I've figured out why Jayne's Vera needed air around her to fire... Assuming that the propellant contained fixed oxygen to enable it to fire, the other problem would be the pressure differential. A regularly firing rifle would have the presure of air outside the breech to counter the inner pressure, whereas in a vacuum you have a much higher differential and it's probable the gun would explode if firing in space.

Which I'm sure wouldn't be nice.

Twelve spheres of unendurable brightness spalled the velvety blackness of space.
The silence on Lester Tourville's flag bridge was absolute
And then the spell was broken as Shannon Foraker looked up from her console from where she had just sent a seemingly innocent command to the main computers of State Security's finest Superdreadnoughts.
"Oops." She said.

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Monday, November 11, 2002 5:29 PM

ERICBALL


My $0.02

Personal energy weapons are impossible simply because there is no way to pack sufficient energy into a small enough space without a matter/anti-matter reaction. (For the only reasonable SF alternative see David Drake's Hammer's Slammers.) A gun has the benefit that a single well-aimed bullet is just as lethal as an entire 30 round magazine.

Although the original VO referred to moons, that would cause signficant barriers to trade due to different orbital periods. Can you imagine trade in an environment where the travel time changes continuously? Inter-stellar travel means the intra-stellar distances are insignificant.

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Tuesday, November 12, 2002 12:52 PM

MARK


Quote:

Originally posted by EricBall:
My $0.02

Personal energy weapons are impossible simply because there is no way to pack sufficient energy into a small enough space without a matter/anti-matter reaction. (For the only reasonable SF alternative see David Drake's Hammer's Slammers.) A gun has the benefit that a single well-aimed bullet is just as lethal as an entire 30 round magazine.



The Military has been experimenting with back-pack lasers since the 60s and 70s and they've produced some nice models that can shatter rocks at several dozen meters from a backpack sized power cell. Whether a portable energy weapon is possible or not depends on the type of weapon and how you want to carry it off. After all, Tazers are energy weapons and they work. Joe Haldeman came up with a sensible idea to make the problem of portable power packs. Just stuff them into the holster and connect the two with wires. With the power problem, could it be solved with a superconducting capacitor and a much smaller power source and just giving it a longer recharge time?

I still stand by what I said about no-one using them even if they were available, other than in space.

As for bullets and precision? One bullet that hits is worth more than a thousand that miss. But how do you ensure the bullet hits? The idea of smart-bullets is all well and good, but the typical slug can only self-aim by a little over a long range, and to make a smart bullet effective for tracking a target and major evasion, you need essentially small missiles, too big for a hand gun.

We can't be sure how their energy weapons work, but I still say the 'ol fashioned bullets are the best bet.

Quote:


Although the original VO referred to moons, that would cause signficant barriers to trade due to different orbital periods. Can you imagine trade in an environment where the travel time changes continuously? Inter-stellar travel means the intra-stellar distances are insignificant.



I think there might have been a slightly off interpretation of the original voice-over... It says we found a new earth and hundreds of new planets were terraformed... It doesn't actually say they were in the same system. Trouble is, Serenity would have to travel at 30,000 times the speed of light to get anywhere in a reaonable amount of time... Add this to the fact that in 450 years we have been able to use up the Earth, shift the population to another GALAXY!!! Terraform a bunch of new worlds and fight a Civil war. I think either the colony mission was made in cryo and took a hell of a long time that isn't figured in, or they found a wormhole.

Which still doesn't explain inter-stellar travel for Serenity. But never mind, trust in Joss.

Twelve spheres of unendurable brightness spalled the velvety blackness of space.
The silence on Lester Tourville's flag bridge was absolute
And then the spell was broken as Shannon Foraker looked up from her console from where she had just sent a seemingly innocent command to the main computers of State Security's finest Superdreadnoughts.
"Oops." She said.

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Wednesday, November 13, 2002 8:43 AM

ERICBALL


How wouldn't orbital mechanics impact the time/distance relationship between moons/planets? Simply speaking, there are going to be times where Mars is on the other side of the Sun from Earth; which has got to impact travel times, especially if you keep acceleration within reasonable boundaries.

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Wednesday, November 13, 2002 10:36 AM

MARK


[q]
I don't know where you got this, but to the best of my knowledge it is incorrect. The Lockheed Backpack Laser program was cancelled because it could not produce usable results. Had it been able to shatters rocks from several dozen meters I believe it would have certainly continued. I don't know of any other development on backpack laser weaponry.
[/q]

I saw it on a rerun of Tomorrows World a few years ago... It was a rerun of stuff that had happened in the past century and we're only talking small rocks being shattered here, but still. They had one of the presenters standing in the desert in the US taking pot-shots at pebbles on the gound and there were little puffs of smole going up as the things fractured.


Twelve spheres of unendurable brightness spalled the velvety blackness of space.
The silence on Lester Tourville's flag bridge was absolute
And then the spell was broken as Shannon Foraker looked up from her console from where she had just sent a seemingly innocent command to the main computers of State Security's finest Superdreadnoughts.
"Oops." She said.

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Thursday, November 14, 2002 8:45 AM

MARK


Quote:

Originally posted by Thegn:
Quote:

Originally posted by Mark:
I saw it on a rerun of Tomorrows World a few years ago... It was a rerun of stuff that had happened in the past century and we're only talking small rocks being shattered here, but still. They had one of the presenters standing in the desert in the US taking pot-shots at pebbles on the gound and there were little puffs of smole going up as the things fractured.

Oh, that makes more sense. Yeah, you can do that with a laser. The sudden increase in temperature causes water in porous rocks to expand rapidly and crack the rock, especially if that laser is tuned to the resonance frequencies of water. I'm sure it appeared much more powerful then it really was, but it doesn’t take a particularly powerful laser to do that.

There are some pretty powerful lasers which will come into use pretty soon as military weapons. But they won't do the kinds of things that people seem to think they will. An example of a lasers use on the battlefield is targeting income artillery shells and exploding them before they impact. This, as you can imagine, is particularly useful. But also you see that it doesn't require the kinds of destructive power that sci-fi has come to associate with lasers. All it must do is punch through the skin of the artillery shell and excite the explosive. We always assume that lasers are more destructive then they really are, which is why there seems to be so many pro-laser weapon people in the sci-fi realm, but the reality is that lasers simply are not that destructive. That's not to say that a laser can't deliver a extraordinary amount of power, but when that energy is localized in a thin beam it's destructive power is diminished. When it comes to killing people or destroying buildings, it's far more efficient to drop a bomb on the target then to surgically slice it into little pieces. A laser principle advantage over a missile or bullet is when surgical accuracy is paramount over destructiveness, as in targeting incoming artillery shells.



I think you're probably right about the fracturing of rocks and stuff... It would take a hell of a lot of laser energy to burn through a person in combat, more that could reasonably be produced by a hand unit... If lasers do turn up in combat, they're going to be like artillery pieces. Mounted on vehicles or carriages with massive power supplies, used either for taking out enemy armour or slicing through ranks of infantry like a scythe... Or in the anti-aircraft/anti-ballistic field.

Hang on a tick... If you listen closely in 'Serenity' you hear a mention to 'Air-Tanks' being used in the battle of Serenity Valley. Assuming they mean some kind of Hover-Tank, that would be a perfect carriage/weapon combination for heavy lasers. No recoil to damage the Tank, and a transport for a big generator.

I think though, that if lasers are going to be used anywhere then it'll be in ship-to-ship engagements in vacuum. The range is whatever the collimation is good for, they're light-speed weapons (So there's no warning before a hit) and there's plenty of room for generators and lasing tubes aboard one of those Dortmunder-class Cruisers.

Twelve spheres of unendurable brightness spalled the velvety blackness of space.
The silence on Lester Tourville's flag bridge was absolute
And then the spell was broken as Shannon Foraker looked up from her console from where she had just sent a seemingly innocent command to the main computers of State Security's finest Superdreadnoughts.
"Oops." She said.

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Saturday, November 16, 2002 3:48 PM

TINYTIMM


In the Safe episode, aka The Gunfight at the Slapdash Corrall, the Lawmen seemed to be armed with large revolvers, including at lease one .44 Magnum S&W and an old M1916 Colt .45. Jayne was armed with that Hopkins and Allen heavily modified revolver with the gas cylinder. The prop department was running out of large revolvers and gave Jaynes Taurus revolvers to the lawmen, perhaps? The two cattle buyers; in the fight the boss had a small cap and ball revolver, his sideman a nickle plated S&W model 10, which looked small in that crowd.

And Mal had his strange pistol, which he has yet to fire. I wait anxiously.

In the River warming scene at the end, Zoe had a full size Winchester 94, lever action and Mal a pump action Winchester Defender. A low price riot shotgun. Whatever Jayne had at the end, it used a Laser illuminator and had a relatively small barrel for a shotgun.

In Ariel we finally see some advanced weaponry. Some sort of sonic assassination device and a stungun type weapon.

Jeff
Who finds these details facinating.

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Saturday, November 16, 2002 4:22 PM

HOBBES


I liked the stungun. It wasn't all raygun, it was just a distruptaion of the surronding air.

-------------------------------------------------
May the road rise to meet you.
May the wind be always at your back.
May you be in heaven an hour before
The Devil knows you’re dead.

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Saturday, November 16, 2002 5:07 PM

MARK


Regarding Mal's curious side-arm... He HAS in fact fired it... In the feature-length pilot he actually fires it a lot. Once to kill a fed in one of those nice standoff breakers that Joss likes and introduced us to in 'Fray' and multiple times in the gunfight at Sniper Gorge. It seems to work Ok for a non-standard weapon, I'm just wondering where the magazine goes.

As for this stun-gun from Ariel - Which I haven't seen yet BTW, as I haven't been able to find a download site - could it be an example of the 'Path Ionization Tazer' I mentioned earlier in this thread? I'd love to be proven right!

Twelve spheres of unendurable brightness spalled the velvety blackness of space.
The silence on Lester Tourville's flag bridge was absolute
And then the spell was broken as Shannon Foraker looked up from her console from where she had just sent a seemingly innocent command to the main computers of State Security's finest Superdreadnoughts.
"Oops." She said.

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Saturday, November 16, 2002 11:25 PM

XENOBOB


I'm pretty certain that weapon (and the blue-hands angents' weapons) are sonic based. It certainly seems that way.

WHY HANDHELD LASER WEAPONS WILL NEVER EXIST
Ok, here's the deal. Lasers require a massive amount of energy to work.
DUE TO THE LAWS OF PHYSICS, we will never find ANYTHING with an energy density high enough to sustain an energy weapon for more than a few shots.
Handheld, laser sidearms are totally out of the question, and a laser rifle would get about 10 shots, max, with a 120 lb. powercell strapped to your back.
It just won't work. Deal with it.

As for the use of guns 500 years in the future, if it can be built cheaply, mass produced, costs nothing, works, and kills people, chances are other people are going to use it to, you guessed it, kill people they don't like.
It's not as much a question of what's technologically advanced, but what's physically possible.

There's so many misconceptions when it comes to energy weapons these days it ain't even funny.
Oh wait, it is.
Ha ha.

Thank you for your time.

And, for the record, I favor swords (yes, swords) over guns when it comes to personal defense. And how long have those been around?

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Saturday, November 16, 2002 11:26 PM

XENOBOB


Sorry about the double post. This thread is huge.

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Saturday, November 16, 2002 11:44 PM

KEF


Quote:

Originally posted by xenobob:
I'm pretty certain that weapon (and the blue-hands angents' weapons) are sonic based. It certainly seems that way.



That was my impression as well.

Agree about lasers too. People were seriously predicting through much of the 20th century that one day we would all have flying cars. Today the idea is laughable. Despite the fact that the military has been investigating the technology since at least the 1960s, a hand-held laser type personal weapon will surely prove to be just as impractical, if not impossible. Furthermore, even if they did finally come up with one someday, it will be NOTHING like what we've seen in science fiction. For one thing, bright beams of light or pulses of energy shooting out of your weapon toward your target may look way cool on a TV show or in a video game, but on a real battlefield it would be an EXTREME LIABILITY. Soldiers generally tend not to want to give away their position to the enemy.

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Sunday, November 17, 2002 7:29 AM

MARK


Quote:


Agree about lasers too. People were seriously predicting through much of the 20th century that one day we would all have flying cars. Today the idea is laughable. Despite the fact that the military has been investigating the technology since at least the 1960s, a hand-held laser type personal weapon will surely prove to be just as impractical, if not impossible. Furthermore, even if they did finally come up with one someday, it will be NOTHING like what we've seen in science fiction. For one thing, bright beams of light or pulses of energy shooting out of your weapon toward your target may look way cool on a TV show or in a video game, but on a real battlefield it would be an EXTREME LIABILITY. Soldiers generally tend not to want to give away their position to the enemy.



You would never have beams of light or pulses coming out of the weapon to give your position away to the enemy... You only get a visible beam if the beam scatters and that is precisely what you design a laser NOT to do. In actual fact, guns give away your position (With muzzle flash and report) more than a laser would, but then we're getting back to the whole thing I said before about anti-laser aerosol vapour and pulse ionisation tazers. Such a tazer, which seems to be what was used in arial, wouldn't need more than a fraction of the power used by a killing laser, as it doesn't have to even burn a person, just ionise the air.

Twelve spheres of unendurable brightness spalled the velvety blackness of space.
The silence on Lester Tourville's flag bridge was absolute
And then the spell was broken as Shannon Foraker looked up from her console from where she had just sent a seemingly innocent command to the main computers of State Security's finest Superdreadnoughts.
"Oops." She said.

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Sunday, November 17, 2002 7:51 AM

KEF


Quote:

Originally posted by Mark:
Quote:


Agree about lasers too. People were seriously predicting through much of the 20th century that one day we would all have flying cars. Today the idea is laughable. Despite the fact that the military has been investigating the technology since at least the 1960s, a hand-held laser type personal weapon will surely prove to be just as impractical, if not impossible. Furthermore, even if they did finally come up with one someday, it will be NOTHING like what we've seen in science fiction. For one thing, bright beams of light or pulses of energy shooting out of your weapon toward your target may look way cool on a TV show or in a video game, but on a real battlefield it would be an EXTREME LIABILITY. Soldiers generally tend not to want to give away their position to the enemy.



You would never have beams of light or pulses coming out of the weapon to give your position away to the enemy... You only get a visible beam if the beam scatters and that is precisely what you design a laser NOT to do. In actual fact, guns give away your position (With muzzle flash and report) more than a laser would, but then we're getting back to the whole thing I said before about anti-laser aerosol vapour and pulse ionisation tazers. Such a tazer, which seems to be what was used in arial, wouldn't need more than a fraction of the power used by a killing laser, as it doesn't have to even burn a person, just ionise the air.



Exactly. a real laser wouldn't be anything like like they're usually depicted in sci-fi TV/movies. (For that matter, the way convential guns are depicted by Hollywood is highly unrealistic as well.) Regardless, even a realistic laser is unlikely ever to become a hand weapon, even in the future, which I think we're all agreed on? I haven't read everything on this thread.

Sonic guns or tazers? Well honestly I'm really in over my head here, so maybe I should just shut up and let the experts talk about this stuff.

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Sunday, November 17, 2002 12:32 PM

MARK


Quote:


Exactly. a real laser wouldn't be anything like like they're usually depicted in sci-fi TV/movies. (For that matter, the way convential guns are depicted by Hollywood is highly unrealistic as well.) Regardless, even a realistic laser is unlikely ever to become a hand weapon, even in the future, which I think we're all agreed on? I haven't read everything on this thread.



Yes, I think we're all concurring on the impossibility of laser pistols as man-killers... Or at least the impossibility of them burning through a man. Hollywood is more concerned with appearances than with substance.

With real guns, there's the whole problem with guns firing fifty bullets from a ten round magazine and the guns sounding wrong or punching through walls when they sould bounce off... Or vice versa.

Quote:


Sonic guns or tazers? Well honestly I'm really in over my head here, so maybe I should just shut up and let the experts talk about this stuff.



I'm not sure about Sonic Guns... I know sound can be lethal, entering the bell chamber of St. Paul's cathedral when a peal is being rung is certain death, and quite a horrible death at that. There's a murder mystery called the 'Nine Tailors' that features a men being killed by a sonic bombardment... The trouble is that to create such a sound requires several tons of church-bells... I'm not sure if, like the lasers, it would be possible to create a sonic disruption wave in a portable system.

I know the tazers are possible... One's alreay been built by the American team working on non-lethal weaponry... The only problem is it would require the shrinking of the laser emitter and that *Would* be scientifically feasable.

Twelve spheres of unendurable brightness spalled the velvety blackness of space.
The silence on Lester Tourville's flag bridge was absolute
And then the spell was broken as Shannon Foraker looked up from her console from where she had just sent a seemingly innocent command to the main computers of State Security's finest Superdreadnoughts.
"Oops." She said.

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Sunday, November 17, 2002 7:05 PM

XENOBOB


I personally think railguns show a lot of promise.
Not in hand weapons, of course, because they are also pretty energy hungry, but would be great for big, capital ships in space.
Projectile weapons are good as ship-to-ship weapons because, due to lack of any friction whatsoever, they have unlimited range, move much faster than in an atmosphere, and they're probably going to blow through a ship's hull no matter how much armor they have. An armor peircing round of depleted uranium the size of a volkswagen, going a dozen kilometers a second, is going to cause some serious damage. And it's not that far fetched, the Department of Defense built their own railgun to test the idea, a 5 MegAmp beast that shoots a 5kg projectile at over 4 Kilometers a second(!). And it works.
Now that's some serious firepower.

Here's some more info about lasers for ya:
Weapons-grade, extremely high energy lasers are really easy to see, as they zap any air molecules between them and the target. It looks sorta like a linear lightning bolt. But, since they don't need to be there for more than a moment to kill things, and they go the speed of light, it would probably be only a quick flash. And they are totally invisibile in a vacuum.
The size of the optics necessary to properly point and focus a laser beam depends on the frequency of the laser and the range to the target.
This means that reallistically, a hand-held laser weapon would look more like a big flashlight or a searchlight than a gunpowder weapon. A Vehicle- or ship-mounted weapon is likely to have optics many yards across.
They are incredibly accurate, as they go only in a straight line at the speed of light. How convenient. They would be great for point-defense weapon systems on large ships, to destroy fighters and missiles.
They can dump enough energy into an object to make it actually explode.
Weather gets in their way. All lasers have limited ranges in an atmosphere.
Smoke and fog will block them, and rain or snow will degrade them.
Some frequencies of light cannot penetrate atmospheres at all.
The best frequencies seem to be Infrared or blue-green visible light for laser weapons.
The only hand-held laser weapon I can really see being used would be a single-shot, high-power sniper rifle type weapon; a sniper could use a series of simple mirrors to take out a target while being totally concealed. But then again, a reflective surface is a great defense against lasers. But it also makes it really damn hard to hide.

And this Tazer you speak of is also called an
electrolaser, it shoots a low-power laser beam to ionize the air, then follows it with an electrical charge that follows the path of the laser to the target. Yes, they're building them today, and it is a great idea.
Unfortunately, they are pretty limited by humidity or rain, as the electric bolt tends to jump off the laser beam to other paths of low resistance. They do not work in space, as there's no air to ionize, instead they simply arc randomly to some nearby metal object.
The best part is that they have stun and kill settings, a low powered blast will most likely stun the target, while a full-powered one will probably stop their heart, and, well, kill them.
Neat, huh?

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Monday, November 18, 2002 11:49 AM

TINYTIMM


Quote:

Originally posted by xenobob:
I personally think railguns show a lot of promise.This means that reallistically, a hand-held laser weapon would look more like a big flashlight.


There is a non-lethal weapon with pulsing laser that looks like a very large 12-cell flashlight. It works in tests and disorients people when shined in their face.

Quote:


They can dump enough energy into an object to make it actually explode.


The US Army has a Hummer mounted laser system for destroying exposed ordnance by laser burning. So it weights about a ton. It works by buring the explosive shell in such a way that it doesn't explode immediately, and by the time it does the structure of the explosive is so disruptive it is ineffective.

Jeff
Who didn't bookmark the website dammnit.

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Monday, November 18, 2002 12:54 PM

ENDERSPAWN


Wrong! In aliens they used a modified M16 or something modern (not the thompson). That's why the magazine is wide enough to look like it holds rifle bullets.

Otherwise your comments are totally supported here, the case made the gun look so much cooler and futuristic.

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Monday, November 18, 2002 1:04 PM

ENDERSPAWN


And by the by, this debate is pretty long so far so I didn't really read it all, but I noticed at least SOMEONE was able to realize that the guns DON'T make regular gun noises! Not only in Jaynestown, but in the ambush in our Mrs. Reynolds and also, I believe, in the pilot (Serenity, not Train Job), the guns not only made a high pitched whine when primed, like a laser or something powering up, but when fired they made a distinctly sci-fi future weapon sound. This is pretty much every time I've heard a gun fired in the show.

Those of you who honestly can't hear it, I find this hard to believe. I was watching Our Mrs. Reynolds and it was so weird and out of place that it was plain as day. The guns are somehow futuristic.

And to add to this debate, I imagine Joss may have ahd a hand in throwing the gunnies for a loop with the oddity of a normally functioning modern weapon in the future that also happens to make SPACE SOUNDS.

Now, if you want a future explanation (besides the absurdly wonderful "the makers of the show are screwing with you"), try this - the show prides itself on its good amount of realism (silence in space, mostly, also the lack of aliens). Now, why don't the guns use some fantastic new kinetic tech, but are fashioned like old guns in sort of a retro thing, like how everyone loves samurai swords now, even though I doubt most people use them for self defense? Future gun, retro look.

And the outrageous explanations on why old guns are here are just pointless. They're future guns. Listen to the space sounds!

PS Railguns ro>

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Monday, November 18, 2002 4:46 PM

XENOBOB


Quote:

Originally posted by Enderspawn:
Wrong! In aliens they used a modified M16 or something modern (not the thompson). That's why the magazine is wide enough to look like it holds rifle bullets.

Otherwise your comments are totally supported here, the case made the gun look so much cooler and futuristic.


Umm, what exactly do you mean by "that's why the magazine to look like it holds rifle bullets"?
Besides, the M41 was supposed to fire caseless ammunition anyway.
The Pulse rifle magazine was just a regular 20 round thompson magazine with a peice of resin on the end.
Have you ever actually looked at the Pulse rifle?
The only gun to use M-16 parts in the entire movie was the flamethrower. The carrying handle was taken from an M-16, and the very back of the flamethrower was the receiver of an M-16.
But the pulse rifle was definitely an M1A1 Thompson SMG, with a Remington 870 shotgun (in a SPAS-12 Cage) below it.
They even have kits where you can take an airsoft thompson and turn it into a replica pulse rifle.
Here are some pics to prove it:
[img]
Shot of the Pulse rifle I found on the web.
[img]
Shot of the thompson I found on the web. Notice the similarities.
[img]
Badly altered version of the above Thompson pic.
[img]
[img]
The pulse rifle in the movie.
It's pretty obvious that the pulse rifle was a Thompson. Deal with it.

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Monday, November 18, 2002 5:51 PM

ENDERSPAWN


WHoops! I meant the OTHER movie with pulse rifles...looks like I dropped the ball there.

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Monday, November 18, 2002 6:33 PM

KEF


Quote:

Originally posted by xenobob:
Here's some more info about lasers for ya:
Weather gets in their way. All lasers have limited ranges in an atmosphere.
Smoke and fog will block them, and rain or snow will degrade them.


I assume that dust would also block them? This sounds like a pretty good reason for why they don't have lasers on these dusty, westerny (and smoggy in the industrial towns?) outer worlds.
Quote:

Some frequencies of light cannot penetrate atmospheres at all.

These terraformed worlds might not all have the same atmospheric content. Earth's atmosphere is 21 percent oxygen, 78 percent nitrogen, and the rest is argon, carbon dioxide, hydrogen, ozone, methane, helium, neon, krypton, xenon, etc. (I just now looked it up, obviously.) Might not different terraformed worlds have different mixes/concentrations of gasses, as long as it was breathable? So perhaps a laser that worked on one planet might not work on another?

Again, I'm way in over my head on technical matters.


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Monday, November 18, 2002 7:39 PM

XENOBOB


Quote:

Originally posted by Enderspawn:
WHoops! I meant the OTHER movie with pulse rifles...looks like I dropped the ball there.


Heh. Yeah, the amount of useless knowledge I've aquired in the past few years alone outshines even John Doe...
Plus, I like movie guns.
Like the ones in Soldier I didn't like the movie itself, but the guns were cool. Took me forever to figure out that was just an AK-47.

Did you know the Volkswagen bug was Hitler's idea?

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Wednesday, November 20, 2002 6:39 AM

WHATNOW


You speak about a power system being necessary for light or optic weapons. If you took a magnifying lens and placed it between the sun and your hand what happens? Hell just stand in the sunlight long enough and you will be burned. You would probably be very surprised concerning what hand weapons exist at this time. Sp Ops have devices that seem far ahead of their time.

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Thursday, November 21, 2002 11:13 AM

TINYTIMM


Quote:

Originally posted by whatnow:
You speak about a power system being necessary for light or optic weapons. If you took a magnifying lens and placed it between the sun and your hand what happens?



If you haven't noticed a star isn't a very portable power supply. Currently, to get decent amounts of power, we need some pretty large generators. Then it doesn't matter how much you fire the system, once or a hundred times the power supply remains the same size. Ammo has the advantage of being carried to fit the mission. Base load, US Army, 7 magazines x 30 rounds plus a hundred rounds in bandoliers. 310 total, plus four grenades. For specific missions load can be adjusted. The current projectile interception system has two large vehicles, minimum, one for power production the other for the weapon and sensors.

Jeff
Who notes batteries are getting better.

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Friday, November 22, 2002 9:58 AM

MARK


There is one possibility... Perhaps... that might explain how to have a multiple shot laser in a portable unit.

Flash-bulbs. Ultra powerful ones... In the early days of lasers, when they were being developed, rather than using electricity to excite the emitter element, they used the sequenced detonation of flash-bulbs...

Now, what if you could load the guns with micro-flares? Some tiny charges of a futuristic bright-burning substance... They might be able to stimulate a sufficient pulse from the emitter to burn someone.

Twelve spheres of unendurable brightness spalled the velvety blackness of space.
The silence on Lester Tourville's flag bridge was absolute
And then the spell was broken as Shannon Foraker looked up from her console from where she had just sent a seemingly innocent command to the main computers of State Security's finest Superdreadnoughts.
"Oops." She said.

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Friday, November 22, 2002 3:25 PM

TINYTIMM


Quote:

Originally posted by Mark:
There is one possibility... Perhaps... that might explain how to have a multiple shot laser in a portable unit.

Flash-bulbs. Ultra powerful ones... In the early days of lasers, when they were being developed, rather than using electricity to excite the emitter element, they used the sequenced detonation of flash-bulbs.



Sounds like the Hammer's Slammer's Universe



Jeff
Who should read better material.

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Saturday, November 23, 2002 1:23 PM

MARK


I haven't reall read much of the Hammer's Slammers stories, but I've been meaning to. How does it sound like that tech? I think the guy who wrote those stories (David Drake) was in Vietman but maybe he encountered flash-bulb lasers later in life?

Twelve spheres of unendurable brightness spalled the velvety blackness of space.
The silence on Lester Tourville's flag bridge was absolute
And then the spell was broken as Shannon Foraker looked up from her console from where she had just sent a seemingly innocent command to the main computers of State Security's finest Superdreadnoughts.
"Oops." She said.

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Sunday, November 24, 2002 1:03 AM

TINYTIMM


Quote:

Originally posted by Mark:
I think the guy who wrote those stories (David Drake) was in Vietman but maybe he encountered flash-bulb lasers later in life?



In the HS Universe Olin Corp. developed a way to exploit a natural phenomenon. Plastic disks with certain materials are exposed to an energy flash in a magnetic field and you get a small, directional nuclear bomb.

As for "flash bulb" lasers, the idea has been around for years. Problem is, the flash bulb is a nuclear explosion.

Jeff
Who prefers smaller, controlled detonations.

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Sunday, November 24, 2002 6:11 AM

MARK


Quote:


As for "flash bulb" lasers, the idea has been around for years. Problem is, the flash bulb is a nuclear explosion.



Yes, bomb-pumped X-Ray lasers are old hat from the Star-Wars program... But I'm not talking about anything that major... I'm talking about miniaturising the elements of an old flash-initiated laser. this certainly does not require a nuke!

Twelve spheres of unendurable brightness spalled the velvety blackness of space.
The silence on Lester Tourville's flag bridge was absolute
And then the spell was broken as Shannon Foraker looked up from her console from where she had just sent a seemingly innocent command to the main computers of State Security's finest Superdreadnoughts.
"Oops." She said.

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Monday, November 25, 2002 12:49 AM

TINYTIMM


Quote:

Originally posted by Mark:
[BI'm talking about miniaturising the elements of an old flash-initiated laser. this certainly does not require a nuke!



I suspect the energy would better be used to launch a projectile, rather than initiate a laser pulse. The interface would eat up much of the energy.



Jeff
Who suspects kinetic energy weapons will be around a long time.

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Monday, November 25, 2002 8:01 AM

MARK


Quote:


I suspect the energy would better be used to launch a projectile, rather than initiate a laser pulse. The interface would eat up much of the energy.

Jeff
Who suspects kinetic energy weapons will be around a long time.



I suspect you're right about guns, but there are situations where a laser has advantages over bullets. Not to mention that we're talking about two different sorts of energy that aren't necessarily related and the fact that I was merely suggesting how lasers MIGHT work, not, in fact, espousing their use myself.

Twelve spheres of unendurable brightness spalled the velvety blackness of space.
The silence on Lester Tourville's flag bridge was absolute
And then the spell was broken as Shannon Foraker looked up from her console from where she had just sent a seemingly innocent command to the main computers of State Security's finest Superdreadnoughts.
"Oops." She said.

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Wednesday, January 1, 2003 3:21 PM

TINYTIMM


From the episode SERENITY 1AGE00
Ok it took awhile before I could properly review Serenity for weapons. Hey, lots to do, including taking wife to Two Towers.
In the Serenity Valley battle scenes Zoe and Mal were carrying Heckler & Koch G36 Assault Rifles, some of the other troops were carrying AK-Ms, M-16s and the SA-80.
http://www.hecklerkoch-usa.com/pages/military/rncframeset.html
The big twin Anti-Aircraft machine guns were Soviet DShK 12.7mm heavy machineguns dating back to WWII. The US called them "fifty-one cals" using an ever so slightly larger bore than the US caliber "fifty."
The "Mole" was carrying three guns, he started with an Astra 400, aka Model 1921, a military pistol standard in the Spanish Army between the wars. Out of his bag he took a SIG-Sauer P229S target pistol and another medium automatic I couldn't identify.
http://www.sigarms.com/products/sportpistols-models.asp?product_id=46&
product_name=P229S

The P229S reappears later in the series in Jayne's arsenal.
In this episode Jayne was carrying that Hopkins and Allen with the universal sight rail and the gas cylinder previously spotted in the promotions.


Jeff Timm
Who notes this show is practice for firearms enthusiasts.

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