Confederate railway gun captured by Union forces, US Civil War, 1864
Confederate railway gun captured by Union forces, US Civil War, 1864
Does that thing have a big turntable under there somewhere? Because from the photo, it looks like it can shoot in exactly or almost exactly the direction the rails happen to be pointing, and if you need to shoot somewhere more than two or three degrees to either side, you're SOL…
21 0 ReplyIt doesn't look like it. They did sometimes use a kind of turntable to allow regular cannons to easily change direction, but I don't think the same was done with these.
16 0 ReplyMaybe it's because of the recoil?
Having the canon alligned with the track allows it to move with the recoil while having it slightly angled may make it derail 🤷♂️
9 0 Reply
I'm guessing it was used almost exclusively to destroy trains.
14 0 ReplySiege of Petersburg, I believe, so trading fire between two relatively static lines.
7 0 Reply
We're huntin trains today, Billy.
9 0 ReplyId expect it was intended to be operated on a curved section of tracks to allow it to aim and function as artillery. Similar concept as the https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Schwerer_Gustav
7 0 Reply
Back when a solid plank was all I took to protect you from rifle fire. Or does the encasing serve some other purpose, perhaps?
14 0 ReplyIt also serves as a bike ramp. The Confederate soldiers were well known for their love of BMX tricks.
25 1 ReplyWood still wasn't strong enough to sustain a lot of fire even from those rifles. The confederacy just didn't have enough iron.
14 0 ReplyThat's some pretty thick wood at a good angle. Maybe there's a mythbusters, but I'd expect it could protect against small arms fire of the day.
5 0 Reply
Plank stronk
6 0 Reply
Kinda looks like one of those turtle tanks (blyatmobiles) that are showing up now in the Russian-Ukrainian War.
9 0 Reply