Originally posted by Legbreaker
View Post
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Anti Tank Rifles
Collapse
X
-
Some good points Targan. Perhaps because .50 BMG has such a thick jacket and doesn't deform actually improved his chances in a roundabout way, straight through with a nice clean hole at either side, less damage than if the round tumbled, a classic case of overpenetration
As for hydrostatic shock, it's such a murky concept I think it needs a whole lot more research done before I am totally convinced of either
1. it causes damage significant enough to cause death
2. it doesn't cause enough damage to warrant its inclusion as a factor in the stopping and/or killing power of a round.
Having started my training with the L1A1 and then later the F88 and having shot a few animals with .308 and .223, I'm leaning more towards big'n'slow will screw you up and fast'n'light will annoy you (there's a reason individual flechette rounds for rifles were discontinued). I think that hydrostatic shock while definately causing some wounding effect, tends to be overestimated in those effects
Comment
-
Originally posted by Legbreaker View PostThe term "hydrostatic shock" springs to mind as being somewhat relevant....
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydrostatic_shock
Comment
-
Originally posted by pmulcahy11b View PostAnd we have yet another thing that RPG rules in general don't really simulate very well.
Comment
-
Originally posted by copeab View PostUnfortunately, hydrostatic shock is largely myth. Except for the brain (enclosed by a fairly inflexible skull) and perhaps the somewhat rigid liver, hydrostatic shock is not really an issue in gunshot wounds.I'm guided by the beauty of our weapons...First We Take Manhattan, Jennifer Warnes
Entirely too much T2K stuff here: www.pmulcahy.com
Comment
-
Originally posted by pmulcahy11b View PostThat's another thing that needs some work in the T2K rules -- myths.sigpic "It is better to be feared than loved" - Nicolo Machiavelli
Comment
-
Actualy the antitank rifle was used in Korea as well by the Chicoms as a long range sniper weapon.
I also remember reading about the soviet antitank rifles at Kursk. And some tanks would have several holes in their vehicles so stopping was not done.
On a T2K note,
I have just added an NPC who has a modified Soviet antitank rifle, just so he can have the benefit of a very heavy round to deal with vehicles and such at roadblocks, as well as taking pot shots at enemy forces who are in fortifications.
You must admit, sometimes a few well placed rounds of something heavy is what is called for, not a burst from a machinegun or a larger round or a rocket launcher. And since the round is found with Ivans heavy MGs it is fairly easy to get.
Modifications my NPC made was a modern bipod, a thick buttpad for the stock and a folding stock with built in shock absorber and of course a muzzlegreak and a few inches of the barrel has been cut off for portability."God bless America, the land of the free, but only so long as it remains the home of the brave."
Comment
-
Originally posted by jester View PostActualy the antitank rifle was used in Korea as well by the Chicoms as a long range sniper weapon.
I also remember reading about the soviet antitank rifles at Kursk. And some tanks would have several holes in their vehicles so stopping was not done.
(SGM Mills had a lot of those little tidbits. Since his previous assignment before being an ROTC instructor was high up at 5th SF Group, he was still hooked into the "SF Network." I remember him distinctly to this day because I learned so much from him.)I'm guided by the beauty of our weapons...First We Take Manhattan, Jennifer Warnes
Entirely too much T2K stuff here: www.pmulcahy.com
Comment
Comment