How Cool is that! and yes, you can* buy it!
*soonTM, just like with flying cars!
View: https://youtu.be/eAHKS0nVlL4
(Test firing at the end of the vid, footage from a backup gun match coming up tomorrow!)
This is a fully 3D printed development model, not yet ready for mass production, but it is made with that in mind (according to the arcflash guy, see previous vid on channel). This is not just a one-off garage build as supposedly multiples of this were delivered to early adopters for feedback.
Current issues I see:
Muzzle velocity makes it rather useless (around 70m/s with 50g projectile) but the capacitor technology will get there soon where this is actually more practical and not just a very very cool toy, again according to the guy from arcflash.
Unstablizied rounds (projectiles tumbling right out the gate) cos there is no contact between the barrel and the projectile, thus rifling wouldn't work at all.
The size and weight is ridiculous for the very limited range and amount of energy it delivers on target.
Overall issues:
Reliability entirely depends on unserviceable parts (it's made of electronics, you can't just field strip a capacitor and clean out the mud to make it run again lol)
It's fragile a f. You gotta worry about the caps not getting bahsed/punctured, water ingress and even condensation, violent shaking and hits... You can't just bash it against the ground to make it run again lol
High power electronics are expensive. Just on the lowest level, think of all the copper windings that went into this thing! Then it will require computer boards, power supply parts and so on. Basically every single thing that makes this mass driver functional is electronics.
Heat. Waaay too much heat, that you can't get around without adding a ton of mass to absorb and/or dissipate it. You can't just change the barrell to solve an overheating, cos that is the least important part. It's everything else around it that gets hot and will blow up.
So, will we see these in 5-10 years used in the field? Nah I don't think this will be viable, ever. It's way too expensive and unpractical in a million ways. You would need to effectively waterproof yet ensure it cools fast enough, all the while make it modular enough for field repairs with parts that are just way too fragile and expensive. As long as you can get a 100+ casings made out of a single coil in this, the classics will remain in service. Unless this thing can come up with an ace against something new that everyday boomsticks can't overcome (and I can't think of anything that those can't do), it won't happen.
Still it looks like a helluva lot of fun to just plink away at targets!
*soonTM, just like with flying cars!
(Test firing at the end of the vid, footage from a backup gun match coming up tomorrow!)
This is a fully 3D printed development model, not yet ready for mass production, but it is made with that in mind (according to the arcflash guy, see previous vid on channel). This is not just a one-off garage build as supposedly multiples of this were delivered to early adopters for feedback.
Current issues I see:
Muzzle velocity makes it rather useless (around 70m/s with 50g projectile) but the capacitor technology will get there soon where this is actually more practical and not just a very very cool toy, again according to the guy from arcflash.
Unstablizied rounds (projectiles tumbling right out the gate) cos there is no contact between the barrel and the projectile, thus rifling wouldn't work at all.
The size and weight is ridiculous for the very limited range and amount of energy it delivers on target.
Overall issues:
Reliability entirely depends on unserviceable parts (it's made of electronics, you can't just field strip a capacitor and clean out the mud to make it run again lol)
It's fragile a f. You gotta worry about the caps not getting bahsed/punctured, water ingress and even condensation, violent shaking and hits... You can't just bash it against the ground to make it run again lol
High power electronics are expensive. Just on the lowest level, think of all the copper windings that went into this thing! Then it will require computer boards, power supply parts and so on. Basically every single thing that makes this mass driver functional is electronics.
Heat. Waaay too much heat, that you can't get around without adding a ton of mass to absorb and/or dissipate it. You can't just change the barrell to solve an overheating, cos that is the least important part. It's everything else around it that gets hot and will blow up.
So, will we see these in 5-10 years used in the field? Nah I don't think this will be viable, ever. It's way too expensive and unpractical in a million ways. You would need to effectively waterproof yet ensure it cools fast enough, all the while make it modular enough for field repairs with parts that are just way too fragile and expensive. As long as you can get a 100+ casings made out of a single coil in this, the classics will remain in service. Unless this thing can come up with an ace against something new that everyday boomsticks can't overcome (and I can't think of anything that those can't do), it won't happen.
Still it looks like a helluva lot of fun to just plink away at targets!