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Rail Guns – the stuff of science fiction writers for more than a century
(Jules Verne, for example) – are rapidly becoming the stuff of science fact!
Whether catapaulting aircraft off the deck of a carrier without
steam, propelling a projectile with such force that it does huge
damage without any explosive warhead . . . or even
launching satellites without rockets (still in the
future – or is it?), electromagnetic force
is changing conventional
wisdom even as we speak!
Rail Guns and
Electromagnetic Launchers
By Dr David Maddison
T
here is a surprisingly long history behind electromagnetic launchers, going back to the mid-19th century. In 1844, a Mr Benningfield (first name unknown)
invented an electric gun called the SIVA or Destroyer but
little is known of what became of it as there was no further
mention of it after 1844.
An advertisement for a demonstration of the device said
“Officers consider that this invention will, in great measure,
supersede Gunpowder, and say that it is very much more
to be feared than any Engine of War in use.
The balls were projected in a continuous stream at a
rate of more than 2,000 per minute, each ball having force
14
Silicon Chip
enough to kill at a greater distance than a mile with certain aim, and continue from year to year at a cost far less
than gunpowder, although with more force.”.
In 1845, in The American Journal of Science and Arts,
October edition (page 132), Charles G. Page described a
“magnetic gun” in which “Four or more helices arranged
successively, constitute the barrel of the gun, which is
mounted with a stock and breech. The bar slides freely
through the helices, and by means of a wire attached at the
end towards the breech of the gun, it makes and breaks the
connexion with the several helices in succession, and acquires such velocity from the action of the four helices as
Celebrating 30 Years
siliconchip.com.au
Benningfield’s
electric gun from
an advertisement
of 1844. Although
little is known of
it, the claims made
certainly seem
ambitious.
to be projected to the distance of forty or fifty feet.”
In 1901, Norwegian Kristian Birkeland is credited with
having invented the coil gun. A magnetised iron projectile was pulled through a series of solenoids, with a system to disengage power to the coils as the projectile passed
through them.
A later version used a coil instead of an iron projectile
and a novel method of switching in which the inductance
of the projectile coil was matched to the drive coils so that
the back-EMF of the drive coil matched the voltage of the
projectile coil so that switching would occur at zero current.
However, there seems to be a similarity with this invention and the 1845 one mentioned above.
The results were disappointing though, as a velocity of
only 100 metres per second was reached with a 10kg projectile fired from a 4m long cannon; much less than the
predicted 600 metres per second. Nevertheless, a projectile range of 1km was achieved. A major problem was be-
At left is the drawing
from Kristian Birkeland’s
1904 US patent entitled
“Electromagnetic gun”.
Figure 1 shows the cross
section of the barrel
illustrated in an unusual
downward pointing
orientation and the coils
in cross section. Note
the projectile contained
within the barrel. Full
patent document at siliconchip.com.au/link/aag6
Below is Birkeland’s
Electromagnetic (Coil)
Gun.
siliconchip.com.au
From the Earth to the Moon, an
1865 novel by Jules Verne,
tells the story of the Baltimore
Gun Club (a society of weapons
enthusiasts) and their attempts
to build an enormous ‘‘space
gun’’ to launch three people
in a projectile with the goal of
landing on the moon. Given the
date and the
lack of scientific
knowledge, some
of Jules Verne’s
assumptions
and calculations
are surprisingly
close to reality.
ing able to supply enough power to the device.
The above mentioned devices were based on solenoids
but the rail gun we know today was invented by Frenchman Louis Octave Fauchon-Villeplee in 1916 who called
it an electric cannon. Its power source was batteries.
His initial working model had a two-metre-long barrel
and was intended to accelerate a 50g, 270mm projectile
to 200 metres per second, for which a required current of
5000A at 40-50V was calculated.
In experiments a current of 600A was achieved which
could drive a projectile through 80mm of wood at 25m, the
limitation apparently being generating the large currents
required. The work was abandoned after World War 1.
In 1920, Fauchon-Villeplee described a rail gun designed
to propel a 100kg projectile at a muzzle velocity of 1600
metres per second, over a distance of 120km. The instantaneous power developed in the barrel would be 3.4GW at
an average current of 3.55 million amps.
The gun assembly with generators was to be mounted on
railway bogies and would have weighed 1000 tonnes. The
power was to be produced by a homopolar generator and
was designed to fire one shot every 20 minutes, consuming
60kg of petrol. The gun was not built due to lack of funding.
The June 1932 issue of “Modern Mechanics and Inventions” magazine mentioned two scientists whose work in
generating pulsed ultra-strong magnetic fields was seen as
the basis of an “electric cannon”.
One was P.L. Kapitza (a Nobel Prize winner) of Cavendish Laboratory, Cambridge University and the other was
T.F. Wall. It is not known where this work went in respect
of a gun but a dramatic image of the hypothesised gun was
produced for the magazine.
In 1933, a Texan by the name of Virgil Rigsby invented a
coil gun intended to be used as a “silent machine gun” but
the military had no interest in it. It was patented in 1934.
The first plans to actually use a rail gun for military service came from Joachim Hänsler in 1944, from Germany’s
Ordnance Office. Theory was developed and a device was
built using batteries as the power source but it was never
employed.
The device was able to propel a 10g mass to 1000 metres
per second. This was a good speed but not much better than
could be developed with chemical propellants at the time.
Further rail gun developments came from General
Electric in the USA, accelerating a 45g projectile to 550
metres per second in 1957; R.L. Chapman, D.E. Harms
Celebrating 30 Years
December 2017 15
Virgil Rigsby with what we would know as a coil gun today.
It used 17 coils and a timing mechanism, similar to that used
on car ignition systems at the time, was used to sequentially
activate the coils. This picture is from November 1936
Popular Science, but there was also an earlier version that
appeared in the June 1933 Popular Mechanics.
“Modern Mechanics and Inventions”
magazine from June 1932 showing a
proposed “electric cannon”.
and G.P. Sorenson accelerating 210mg to 9.5km/s in 1963
and D.E. Brast and D.R. Sawle accelerating 30mg to 6km/s
(21,600km/h!) in 1964.
The Australian contribution
In 1970, J.S. Adams, at what was then the Defence Standards Laboratory in Melbourne, accelerated a 300mg projectile to 3km/s.
The first large-scale rail gun in the world was built by
John P. Barber at the Australian National University in the
early 1970s and one experiment accelerated a 3g projectile
to 5.9 km/s. Its power source was a homopolar generator
facility designed by Sir Mark Oliphant.
The homopolar generator (see box) could deliver 500MJ
of energy with current pulses of up to 1.6 million amps. A
variety of rail guns were built with bore sizes from a few
millimetres to 20mm, with lengths from under a metre to
several metres and input currents of up to 400,000A.
The success of the Australian work led other major organisations around the world such as the US Defense Advanced Projects Agency (DARPA) to establish advanced
rail gun research programs in the latter half of the 1970s.
Another Australian rail gun was at what was then known
as the Materials Research Laboratory of the Department of
Defence at Maribyrnong in Victoria (an institution where
the Author used to work). The research program was general in scope and was about studying the science of these
devices with launch velocities up to 10km/s and input energies of up to 500kJ or more.
Unfortunately, the rail gun seems to be another area in
which Australia was once a world leader in a technology
that was not pursued.
Advantages and disadvantages of
electromagnetic launchers
Rail guns and coil guns have the advantage of greater
What is a homopolar generator?
A homopolar generator is a now uncommon type of DC electrical generator which
uses a rotating disc in a perpendicular magnet field to generate a potential difference
between the centre of the disc and its rim.
The homopolar generator used at ANU to
power the railgun had the disc in the form
of a heavy flywheel that could store enormous amounts of energy which could be
quickly discharged in the form of a current
pulse into the railgun or other experiments
it was connected to.
For details of the homopolar generator
used in ANU, readers are referred to “The Big
Machine” at siliconchip.com.au/link/aag7
The generator was in use from 1962 until 1985 after which it was dismantled. This
author is privileged to have seen this device.
Image credit: Australian National University: University Photographs, ANUA 226-895-2
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Silicon Chip
Celebrating 30 Years
Mark Oliphant (in lab coat) demonstrates
the homopolar generator to the GovernorGeneral, Sir William Slim, October 1954.
siliconchip.com.au
Just what is a Rail Gun?
A rail gun comprises two parallel electrically conductive rails
bridged by a conductor connected together by a moveable armature. A DC current is applied to the rails and flows through the
armature and the resulting magnetic field causes acceleration of
the armature, which is also either the projectile or pushes on one,
down the rail and out of the device.
Often the armature has to be given a start by compressed gas,
for example, as if the current is applied when it is stationary it
might become welded to the rails. A plasma, which is electrically
conductive, can also be used as the armature in some implementations of the rail gun.
The Lorenz force drives the armature along the rails. In any inductive loop, which is essentially what the rails and armature are,
the Lorenz force acts to push the components apart via opposing
magnetic fields. If one part of the inductor is free to move, in this
case the armature, it will be driven along the rails in a direction determined by the polarity of the power. If the current is high enough
with a fast enough rise time, it can be ejected at great velocity.
The US Navy has advanced rail guns under development although deployment seems to be considerably delayed. Two contractors are involved in development, BAE Systems and General
Atomics Electromagnetic Systems (GA-EMS). The Navy’s short
term goal is a weapon in the 20MJ to 32MJ range that can shoot
a projectile 50 to 100 nautical miles with a repetition rate of at
least ten rounds per minute.
The amount of energy represented by 32MJ is the same as
4.8kg of C4 military explosive. It is also about the amount of energy behind a 10.5kg projectile with a velocity of Mach 7 (8644
km/h) although much less than that, maybe 50%, will be delivered to the target. By way of comparison, a tank’s 120mm gun
can generate 9MJ of energy at the muzzle and a cruise missile
like the Tomahawk can deliver 3000MJ of destructive power to a
target from 450kg of explosive.
While some weapons might be more destructive with the
amount of energy delivered to a target, rail gun projectiles are
Driving
Current
Magnetic
Field
Projectile
(Above): railgun
schematic showing
how opposing
magnetic forces are
established when a
current flows, forcing
out the projectile.
You can demonstrate
this effect at home
as explained in the
link in the text box.
(Right): simulation of
magnetic field lines in
a railgun at a certain
instant in time with
the electrical potential
on the rails shown
as different colours.
siliconchip.com.au
very fast in comparison to conventional weapons, are cheaper and
can be launched in greater numbers with a fully developed operational system.
An important consideration limiting the employment of shipmounted rail guns is the amount of electrical power required. The
Zumwalt-class destroyers of the US Navy are the only non-nuclear
vessels that have sufficient spare power available for a rail gun. A rail
gun capable of propelling a projectile to the desired range would required 25MW of available power to charge a capacitor bank or other
pulsed power system. The Zumwalt destroyer can produce 78MW
while a typical naval vessel only has 9MW spare. Existing vessels
would have to be fitted with extra power systems if rail guns were
to be retro-fitted.
GA-EMS has three rail guns under development. The 3MJ Blitzer,
the 10MJ medium range multi-mission rail gun system and the 32MJ
Advanced Containment system. A live action video of the Blitzer rail
gun in operation can be seen at “Blitzer AUSA 2016 ” siliconchip.
com.au/link/aah3
In August this year (2017) it was announced that GA-EMS had
completed final assembly and factory acceptance testing of a 10MJ
(megajoule) medium range multi-mission rail gun system in preparation for transport to a proving ground in Utah. This weapon is a
third generation design with a fifth generation pulsed power system.
It is designed for a fairly small footprint on ship and mobile platforms. The system was previously tested with projectiles accelerated
at 30,000g and the projectiles had two-way communication with the
ground station. In the current phase of development of this rail gun
there is a focus on the gun’s fire repetition rate.
Another version of the rail gun is one in which a plasma (hot electrically conductive gas stripped of its outer electrons) is fired rather
than a solid projectile. HyperV Technologies Corp. has developed
some of these devices. The plasma rail gun is not designed to operate in air but in a vacuum or near vacuum. It is intended to be used
in various types of nuclear fusion reactor projects, laboratory astrophysics experiments and in thrusters for spacecraft.
Projectile
Current
Force
Rail
BAE Systems prototype railgun on display on the USS Millinocket.
A GA-EMS railgun was on display at the same time. Note these were
on static display only and not installed on the ship and no testing has
yet been done at sea, though it had been planned to do so by now.
BAE Systems 32 MJ railgun
at the Naval Surface Warfare
Center in Dahlgren, Virginia,
USA. You can watch it in
action at “Electromagnetic
Railgun - First shot at
Dahlgren’s new Terminal
Range” siliconchip.com.au/
link/aah4
Celebrating 30 Years
December 2017 17
A concept from General Atomics about how a railgun might be used as a battlefield weapon. In direct fire mode a
projectile can reach the horizon in six seconds, in indirect fire mode the projectile is launched into space and can reach a
land target 370km away in six minutes.
safety for their users, since no potentially hazardous propellants and explosives are needed, which simplifies the
supply chain and strict storage and handling requirements.
Much higher projectile velocities can also be achieved compared with conventional guns. This leads to great destructive power by kinetic energy alone although some proposed
projectile designs have terminal guidance and even small
explosive charges.
Another advantage of rail guns in military applications
is the relatively low cost of the projectiles compared with
a guided missile.
But a significant disadvantage of all launcher designs
is the requirement for large generators and pulsed power
supplies.
The mass driver can theoretically achieve high enough
velocities for launching materials from Earth to space or
from objects in space where electricity may be the only
power source, eg, from solar panels and where no chemical fuels are available.
Note that by using chemical propellant guns of a very
special design it is also possible to launch materials into
space from Earth.
Google “Project HARP”, which stands for Super High
Altitude Research Project, [siliconchip.com.au/link/aah6].
By the way, this is quite different to, and should not be
confused with, the now-defunct HAARP project (HAARP:
Researching The Ionosphere), featured in a 2012 SILICON
CHIP article (siliconchip.com.au/Article/492). Also see the
Jules Verne Launcher [siliconchip.com.au/link/aah5].
18
Silicon Chip
The coil gun
A coil gun, also known as a Gauss rifle, uses one or more
coils mounted on a common axis to accelerate a projectile
down the central axis of the coil assembly. It is important
that when multiple coils are used that there is a proper
sequential activation and deactivation of adjacent coils or
the projectile will become trapped.
If one coil is used the projectile must be inserted at the
proper location within the coil body. (Imagine a magnetic
object put into the central axis of an electrically-energised
coil, it would simply oscillate back and forth under normal circumstances.)
A rail gun requires a projectile or armature to be in contact with rails but in a coil gun the projectile does not nec-
Representation of a coil gun. The projectile has passed
through the first set of coils which have been deactivated
and is being pulled and accelerated toward the middle
coil which has been activated. Having passed through the
middle coil, which will then be deactivated, the third coil
will be activated and the projectile accelerated toward that.
Diagram source: ZeroOne.
Celebrating 30 Years
siliconchip.com.au
A General Atomics Electromagnetic Systems 32MJ Advanced Containment railgun system in test configuration.
essarily need rails and can be suspended by the magnetic
field, although in some designs the coils runs along a track.
Coil guns are much more simple to construct than rail
guns due to fewer practical difficulties and are a popular
choice among hobbyists. Some links are provided elsewhere on hobby projects.
In 1978 a Soviet scientist by the name of V.N. Bondaletov,
using a coil gun, achieved a record for acceleration by accelerating a 2-gram ring to 5km/s over a distance of just 1cm.
Applications suggested for coil guns including firing projectiles into space, military mortars (one project that was
funded by DARPA has projected mortars twice the range of
conventional ones) and Electromagnetic Missile Launcher
(EMML) for launching Tomahawk cruise missiles. These
projects do not currently appear to be under active development. The Chinese are said to be developing an active
protection system for tanks based on a coil gun.
The mass driver for space launch
Electromagnetic launch systems have been proposed
as a cheaper method of getting materiel into space since in a conventional
rocket launch most of the mass of the Flight Body
launch vehicle is the rocket body with
relatively little payload. An electromagnetic launcher leaves the launcher device on the ground ensuring that
most of the flight body is payload.
Electromagnetic launchers have
been proposed to launch materials
A concept for an electromagnetic
launcher to launch payloads into
space from the side of a mountain.
Image source, Ian R. McNab, 2003.
siliconchip.com.au
from the Earth, Moon and other bodies such as asteroids.
In the case of a launch from Earth there is a significant
problem of high velocities required to launch objects into
orbit of greater than 7500 metres per second. This means
long launch tubes, high energies, high acceleration of 1000G
or more and aerodynamic heating of the flight body.
The high acceleration means that only robust payloads
such as water, solid metals, fuels and other items that can
easily sustain a high acceleration without damage can
be utilised. Certainly, humans are out of the question for
launch by this method.
The high velocity also requires some sort of cooling system and heat shield attached to the flight body.
For launches from the Moon and asteroids of mined raw
or refined materials the low gravity and lack of an atmosphere means that lower accelerations can be used and aerodynamic heating of the flight body is not an issue.
There have been several concepts of using a mass driver
for space launch.
Mass Driver 1 was an early constructed prototype mass
Evacuated Launch Tube
Containing
Railgun Accelerator
~10MWe power plant
to provide launch
power
High (2-3km)
mountain on or
near the Equator
Celebrating 30 Years
December 2017 19
ACCELERATION
TUBE
LAUNCH
EGRESS
TUBE
HATCH
PLASMA
EMPTY SLED
WINDOW
PROJECTILE
Y-AXIS
Z-AXIS
(VERTICAL)
X-AXIS
PROJECTILE
MAGLEV SLED
Launch ring concept. This has an underground accelerator
ring and an above ground launch ramp.
driver designed to launch materials from the lunar surface
to the fifth Lagrange point. This is an area of stable orbit
between the Earth and moon where it has been proposed
to build space colonies and where objects will remain in
place without station keeping.
The device was built by students at the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology in 1976/77 for around $2000. It had
20 drive coils, a “bucket” (armature) in which the payload
was contained and four copper tubes through which the
drive current, supplied by car batteries, was carried.
The bucket was electrically connected by brushes to the
rails and a microswitch was activated as the bucket passed
each coil causing the energising of the appropriate coils
in sequence via capacitor discharges which propelled the
bucket via the Lorenz force. An acceleration of up to 33g
could be achieved.
There is also a 2006 concept from LaunchPoint Technologies who developed the Launch Ring concept. This design
comprises a circular evacuated ring with a linear motor and
a sled containing the launch vehicle held without contact
with the ring by magnetic levitation. This is accelerated
around the ring multiple times until it has reached a velocity of 9000 metres per second at which point it is diverted
to a ramp built up a hill or mountain which is located at a
tangent to the acceleration ring.
It was estimated that the launch vehicle would reach the
required velocity in about one hour. Multiple sleds could
be maintained within the ring allowing multiple launches in sequence. The egress window would have a plasma
window at the exit point to prevent air entering into the
evacuated system.
Conceptual designs were created for both superconducting and non-superconducting systems. A later more cost
effective concept was also developed but details have not
been released. See siliconchip.com.au/link/aah7
LaunchPoint Technologies Launch Ring. The launch
tube would be built up the side of a mountain while the
acceleration tube would be buried in the ground.
higher maintenance and shorter service life; the inability
to launch light aircraft such as drones and a high thermal
signature and energy requirement due to the large amount
of steam that has to be produced for a single launch – a
typical figure is about 600kg. These systems are also very
heavy and take a lot of space in the ship.
EMALS uses a linear induction motor to propel a carriage
attached to the aircraft along the launch track.
Linear induction motors are also typically used on magnetic levitation trains and also the tracked train servicing
the terminals at the JFK Airport in New York and are a
well-established technology.
EMALS consists of six main systems comprising:
• Prime Power Interface that connects the ship’s power
to the energy storage generators;
• Launch Motor in the form of a linear induction motor;
• Launch Control System to control the current to the
Launch Motor in real time;
EMALS
(ElectroMagnetic Aircraft Launch System)
Traditionally, aircraft are launched from aircraft carriers
using a steam catapult. These are effective and reliable but
have a number of disadvantages, including uneven acceleration leading to excessive forces on air-frames and therefore
20
Silicon Chip
EMALS launch motor in land-based experimental
installation. Image credit: General Atomics.
Celebrating 30 Years
siliconchip.com.au
“Below deck” view of EMALS equipment.
Image credit: General Atomics.
EMALS energy storage system in land-based testing.
Image credit: General Atomics.
• Energy Storage System that provides power to the Launch
Motor for two to three seconds during the launch process and is recharged between launches;
• Power Conversion System that is a solid state system
that converts power from the Energy Storage system to
the appropriate voltage and current to drive the shuttle
along the Launch Motor and
• Energy Distribution System that delivers power from
the Power Conversion System to the launch motor via a
system of cables and connectors.
Like other linear induction motors, EMALS use a row
of stator coils along the track. These are energised only in
the vicinity of the shuttle as it is propelled down the track
to minimise losses. EMALS can launch a 45,000kg aircraft
91m down the length of the track to achieve a launch velocity of 240km/h.
A key to the operation of EMALS is an energy storage
mechanism. Ship power is used to spin up a series of four
disk (flywheel) alternators which are discharged during
the launch process. A maximum energy launch will reduce the speed of the rotors from 6400 RPM to 5205 RPM.
It takes 45 seconds to recharge which is faster than a
steam catapult can recharge. The maximum energy launch
represents 136kWh of energy or about the same as four litres of petrol.
EMALS offers lower maintenance and staff requirements,
lower life-cycle cost, reduced thermal signature, increased
capabilities to launch lighter unmanned aircraft and future heavier aircraft and with reduced weight and volume.
EMALS also offers flexibility of installation so can also be
used on a variety of ship sizes.
The United States Navy has an EMALS system operational on the USS Gerald R. Ford (CVN 78) and will next
have one operational on the USS John F. Kennedy (CVN 79).
Associated with EMALS but a separate system is the
Advanced Arresting Gear (AAG) system. This system has
only just finished development after many delays but is
currently installed on the USS Gerald R. Ford and will
When is a “Rail Gun” not a “Rail Gun ”
There are various devices which have been called “Rail Guns”
over the years which have nothing to do with the electromagnetic
devices we are talking about here. We show two of these below.
There are the railway-mounted heavy artillery pieces of both
world wars. The 800mm German Schwerer Gustav (WWII) is the
largest gun ever made and used in combat, and could fire seven
tonne shells a distance of 47km.
Another type of “rail gun” which you may encounter uses custom-made rifles (using conventional ammunition), designed for
competitive shooting where the emphasis is on ultra-high precision. See siliconchip.com.au/link/aah8
Built in 1941, Germany’s Schwerer Gustav (English:
Heavy Gustaf) rail-mounted monster. See siliconchip.
com.au/link/aah9
Unlimited class railgun for competitive shooting – not
to be confused with the electromagnetic variety. Image
source: siliconchip.com.au/link/aaha
siliconchip.com.au
Celebrating 30 Years
December 2017 21
Resources
“The Big Machine” article about the homopolar generator
built by Sir Mark Oliphant at the Australian National University
which was used to power the world’s first large scale rail gun:
siliconchip.com.au/link/aahb
A very nice and clear explanation of the physics of a moving bar
in a magnetic field which is relevant to the rail gun can be seen
at “Electromagnetic Induction: Induced EMF in a Moving Bar in
a Magnetic Field” siliconchip.com.au/link/aahc
Another video explaining the physics is “Rail Gun example”
siliconchip.com.au/link/aahd
and “U.S. Military’s Most Powerful Cannon - Electromagnetic rail
gun - Shoots 100 miles - Mach 7” siliconchip.com.au/link/aahe
Advanced Arresting Gear, below deck view
be installed in other carriers of that class such as the USS
John F. Kennedy. Energy is absorbed via water turbines
and induction motors.
Videos to watch:
“Fighter Lands on Next Generation Carrier USS Gerald R. Ford for the First Time” siliconchip.com.au/link/aahg
and “USNI News Video: Sailors Describe First Fighter
Landing, Launch on USS Gerald R. Ford” siliconchip.com.
au/link/aahf
The US Department of Defense has also given the Indian
Navy approval to purchase EMALS and AAG.
Acknowledgement: The author wishes to acknowledge the assistance of Andrew Krelle in locating some of the source documents.
The rail gun in the Australian Parliament
Rail guns have been mentioned nine times in the Federal Parliament from 1984 to 1988.
This was mainly in connection to the one that was under development by the then Defence Science and Technology Organisation’s Materials Research Laboratory in
Maribyrnong, Victoria and in relation to the then Government’s opposition to the Strategic Defense Initiative
of the United States (see below).
The questions can be seen here: siliconchip.com.au/
link/aahi
Geoff Pryor’s 1984 cartoon about then Prime Minister Bob Hawke’s embarrassment when it was disclosed that he
had committed Australia to collaboration on the US “Star Wars” program (Strategic Defense Initiative) through the
Australian Department of Defence despite his party’s opposition to it. siliconchip.com.au/link/aahh
22
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Celebrating 30 Years
siliconchip.com.au
Building your own electromagnetic launcher device – some ideas
Building some type of electromagnetic launcher is within the
scope of an experienced and responsible electronics hobbyist
and there are many plans and videos on the Internet showing
how to do this.
SILICON CHIP presents these URLs for information only. We cannot advise you on the legality of making a high power one in your
jurisdiction, particularly in Australia with its many “nanny state”
laws so you would need to determine this yourself.
One tip: never refer to it as a ‘‘gun’’– rail or otherwise!
Nevertheless, here are a few examples from overseas enthusiasts. While they do not have anything like the energy of a traditional firearm, very high energies and voltages are involved in
devices of this kind and they can be potentially lethal.
A video safely demonstrating the principles of a rail gun using
only cardboard, aluminium foil, glue, 9V battery, a piece of steel
rod and two magnets followed by instructions on how to build a
small rail gun can be viewed at “How To Build a Railgun Experiment” siliconchip.com.au/link/aahj
The author has additional details and other interesting projects
at siliconchip.com.au/link/aahk
Very simple experiment
to demonstrate railgun
principles using basic
materials of cardboard,
aluminium foil, glue, 9V
battery, a piece of round metal steel rod and two magnets.
The magnets may not be needed if a high enough current
is used.
A variation of this idea is to use model railway track as the two
parallel rails as shown in the video “Lorentz Force Experiment using N-Scale Track (240fps)” siliconchip.com.au/link/aahl and a
similar experiment without rail track “Fuerzas de Lorentz (corto) /
Lorentz forces (short)” siliconchip.com.au/link/aahm
David Wirth
and his
portable
railgun.
It uses 3D
printed
components
and is
controlled
by an
Arduino.
You can
read more at siliconchip.com.au/link/aahn
A DIY rail gun by Zebralemur siliconchip.com.au/link/aahq is
claimed to be the most powerful built by an individual. It uses 56
400v, 6000µF capacitors.
Zebralemur’s home made railgun, claimed to be the most
powerful built by a non-government entity.
An Instructable on building your own rail gun is at siliconchip.
com.au/link/aahr This person makes a coil gun and provides an extensive discussion about the electronics involved.
“World Fastest Six Stage Coil Gun Yak Questions Answered”
siliconchip.com.au/link/aahs
Thinkbotics, a company that supplies to robot experimenters
have developed the EM-15 coil gun and their website siliconchip.
com.au/link/aaht states that plans will be available ‘‘soon’’.
The electronics of the coil gun consist of a voltage step-up transformer converter, a Cockcroft-Walton voltage multiplier cascade,
a capacitor energy storage bank, a voltage comparator to set the
charge voltage on the capacitor bank, an SCR switching section
and a single accelerator coil.
Construction details were published in the March 2008 edition
of Nuts and Volts magazine, see siliconchip.com.au/link/aahu
Here is a video of a home made coil gun siliconchip.com.au/
link/aaho You can read more about this project at siliconchip.
com.au/link/aahp
Thinkbotics EM-15 coil gun.
The CG-42 coil
gun. Note the eight coils
which are sequentially
energised to propel the
projectile through.
siliconchip.com.au
A simple mass driver can be built with plans at this link and
there is also a video of the device. siliconchip.com.au/link/aahv
Finally, here’s a clever launcher contraption made with rare earth
magnets, no power required. “Magnet Gun -magnetic launcher”
siliconchip.com.au/link/aahw
Celebrating 30 Years
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