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Satellite imagery reveals mystery 'supergun' in Chinese desert

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Sean O'Connor, Indianapolis - IHS Jane's Defence Weekly

13 November 2013
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Astrium imagery dated 19 July 2013 shows two objects under testing at an armour and artillery test complex near Baotou, China. (CNES 2013, Distributed Astrium Services/Spot Image S.A/IHS)

Satellite imagery has revealed two unusually large artillery pieces, measuring about 80 ft and 110 ft respectively, at a test centre for armour and artillery northwest of Baotou in China.

The two pieces, which are horizontally mounted, are mounted on a concrete pad that appeared between September 2010 and December 2011, when the two pieces were first captured by satellite imagery. Images provided by Astrium confirmed that the objects were still in place in July 2013.

The 2011 imagery clearly depicts a series of what appear to be targets in front of the 110 ft piece, suggesting some kind of penetration testing for high-velocity projectiles.

China has historically shown interest in large calibre, long-range artillery. It experimented with the Xianfeng 'supergun' in the 1970s as part of Project 640 anti-ballistic missile programme. Approximately 85 ft long, Xianfeng may be the smaller of the two objects retained for experimental use after its cancellation in 1980.

In the 1990s it was revealed that China had built a long-range 'supergun' technology testbed similar to the Iraqi Project Babylon supergun designed by Gerald Bull. IHS Jane's Land Warfare Platforms: Artillery & Air Defence notes that Bull was heavily involved in designing long-range Chinese artillery systems for Norinco in the 1980s.

The larger Baotou artillery piece outwardly resembles the Project Babylon 'supergun', which was theoretically capable of extreme-range artillery barrages or of targeting orbiting satellites. Bull's 'Baby Babylon' testbed measured 150 ft in length, compared with the 105 ft-long larger piece at Baotou.

COMMENT
Although the Baotou pieces appear similar in design to the Bull 'supergun' concept, it seems unlikely that they are intended for long-range artillery barrages or anti-satellite operations given China's extensive long-term development of ballistic missiles for both of these missions.

Alternatively, the devices could also be railgun:azn: prototypes, although this appears unlikely as there is no significant external power routed to the test pad and a lack of environmental protection. The other possibility is that China is simply reusing the legacy systems from its long-range artillery programmes from the 1970s and 1990s as part of a projectile test range - a view that is supported by the presence of what appears to be 'used' targets on the northwest side of the pad.

Satellite imagery reveals mystery 'supergun' in Chinese desert - IHS Jane's 360
 
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Any of this kind of Gun can be made to byte the dust with a shot of short range missile like Pragati.
 
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How about tactical nuclear artillery guns???
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If the cannon was armed with a nuclear shell, then it would be an effective weapon, especially against waves of soldiers and armored vehicles.
 
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like this one?

The German rail gun "Dora" and "Gustav" used in WWII, caliber of 80 centimeters, affective range of 39,000 metres.

It‘s the modern sense of the word “railgun”,i.e. electromagnetic gun。 
Any of this kind of Gun can be made to byte the dust with a shot of short range missile like Pragati.

Smartazz,you sound as if India is the only country with missiles。:D

By the way,this is no WWII railguns as shown in the post by our Vietnamese friend。This is Chinese electromagnetic railgun going through tests at a site near where Chinese tanks are manufactured。:wave:
 
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It‘s the modern sense of the word “railgun”,i.e. electromagnetic gun。
they used railway as mean of transportation thats why they were known as rail gun and the thing u are talking about is totally different
 
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2x China railgun prototypes.

American have been testing their railgun and shoot
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In the future railgun could replace missile
 
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lol, already it's a railgun even though the article pretty much discards this option.
 
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I got a question, who keeps searching every inch of google maps? What kind of idiot does this?
 
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Any of this kind of Gun can be made to byte the dust with a shot of short range missile like Pragati.

Unless the weapon is protected with other military assets and made to hits targets beyond the range of the opposition, which it is designed to do.
 
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