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![]() "Eunometic" wrote in message ... snip more of Arndt's unsupported fantasies The reason for the 'bouncing bomb' was surely that it was the ony way that a large charge could be placed accurately. There are at least half a dozen different guidence methods in service in various types of missile that can achieve 1 meter accuracy. Maverick, Martel, the old Condor, Raptor, SLAMER differential GPS, TV with or without man in the loop etc. All that is needed is to 'super size' them. An extraction of a MOAB sized weapon from a C130 being one option. A C-130 penetrating 1400 miles of PRC airspace and delivering a MOAB, huh? Get a grip. And doesn't "differential GPS" require both quite a bit of time and some post-processing? One advanced version of SCUD has a TV guidence system to reduce the accruacy to well below 50 meters. (Using a trident missile for this sort of business with a penetrating warhead is another option) Taiwan has neither Scuds not Tridents. Scud lacks enough of a warhead, too. In WW2 apart from the fact that the carrier aircraft were impossibly vulnerable And a C-130 lumbering through PLA and PLAAF defended territory would not be?! Brooks the Germans could have carried out such attacks with Fritz-X from around 1943 onwards and the Americans with AZON/RAZON. The Kehl-Strassbourg guidence system was compromised after the capture of some missiles in Italy but variations of the guidence system to restore immunity were also possible and plans existed to use the missile on the 2 seat 4 engined version of the Arado 234C jet bomber and thus the Germans would have had a delivery vehicle for such a weapon.. The Fritz-X was a little small: being half the mass of highball. AZON's main use seems to have been attacks against railway lines in the far east in a role it was highly effective. (23% hit rate). This CLOS type of guidence could have placed a bomb behined a damwall. |
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In article ,
on Wed, 23 Jun 2004 22:27:37 -0400, Kevin Brooks attempted to say ..... And a C-130 lumbering through PLA and PLAAF defended territory would not be?! Shh, you will give away the secret that a C130 is an even better dogfighter than the P-3C -- When dealing with propaganda terminology one sometimes always speaks in variable absolutes. This is not to be mistaken for an unbiased slant. |
#3
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![]() "Kevin Brooks" wrote in message ... "Eunometic" wrote in message ... snip more of Arndt's unsupported fantasies The reason for the 'bouncing bomb' was surely that it was the ony way that a large charge could be placed accurately. There are at least half a dozen different guidence methods in service in various types of missile that can achieve 1 meter accuracy. Maverick, Martel, the old Condor, Raptor, SLAMER differential GPS, TV with or without man in the loop etc. All that is needed is to 'super size' them. An extraction of a MOAB sized weapon from a C130 being one option. A C-130 penetrating 1400 miles of PRC airspace and delivering a MOAB, huh? Get a grip. And doesn't "differential GPS" require both quite a bit of time and some post-processing? All the DGPS processing is easily handled in a hand held unit, real time. The problem being you need the well surveyed differential station(s) in the area up and broadcasting the difference between where the GPS and the survey say they are.. The latest version, WAAS (Wide Area Augmentation System), has all the user data coming from the sat. However, a precisely located ground station has to send the correction data up. The theory being if the ground station and the user are looking though the same atmospherics the correction factors are the same. I'm not *real* well read in it but it looks like in practice that the correction factors generated in Taiwan would significantly improve accuracy at 3GD. |
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Taiwan is a nuclear stand-by nation capable of producing a nuclear
weapon in one year. Since China is approx. 2-4 years away from invading the island according to the latest 2004 Intels then Taiwan should get the green light from the US and start making them in preparation for the inevitable attack. China keeps insisting on taking the island by force, even threatening neutron weapons now... so let Taiwan produce nukes. Doesn't make much difference though when a carrier battle group will likely be in the Taiwan Straight, right? What are the Chinese going to do, nuke it and face grave consequences like the DPRK? I'm willing to bet that as invasion approaches we park two carrier battle groups there and station B-2, F-117, and B-1 aircraft in neighboring friendly nations like the ROK and Japan. What a showdown that would be. It would make CNN worth watching again ![]() Rob |
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"robert arndt" wrote in message
om... Taiwan is a nuclear stand-by nation capable of producing a nuclear weapon in one year. Since China is approx. 2-4 years away from invading the island according to the latest 2004 Intels then Taiwan should get the green light from the US and start making them in preparation for the inevitable attack. China keeps insisting on taking the island by force, even threatening neutron weapons now... so let Taiwan produce nukes. Doesn't make much difference though when a carrier battle group will likely be in the Taiwan Straight, right? What are the Chinese going to do, nuke it and face grave consequences like the DPRK? I'm willing to bet that as invasion approaches we park two carrier battle groups there and station B-2, F-117, and B-1 aircraft in neighboring friendly nations like the ROK and Japan. What a showdown that would be. It would make CNN worth watching again ![]() Rob I think you are right that Taiwan has the capacity, and I wonder why they haven't gone ahead and mimicked Israel's strategy of maintaining a "hidden" nuclear capacity just in case (I assume they have not since the nukes aren't very useful if nobody knows about them). If Taiwan did deploy nukes, I would think that China might stop wasting resources on creating the means to invade Taiwan. And although I know there are many Taiwanese who have no interest in reunification with China under any circumstances, still I wonder why Taiwan hasn't used it's status as a democracy to try to encourage reform in China, something along the lines of a policy stating reunification with China can only happen once the mainland is also a democracy, which I would think could strengthen the hand of the PRC reformers. Even if Taiwan isn't serious in wanting to reunite, this offer makes a lot of sense to me since I doubt a democratic PRC would been as keen on forced reunification The US vs. China scenario would be very interesting, though of course I hope it never comes to that. Current thinking seems to have the US eventually winning this one, though recent events make me wonder if America still has the will to fight wars involving significant casualties! Jarg. |
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"Kevin Brooks" wrote in message ...
"Eunometic" wrote in message ... snip more of Arndt's unsupported fantasies The reason for the 'bouncing bomb' was surely that it was the ony way that a large charge could be placed accurately. There are at least half a dozen different guidence methods in service in various types of missile that can achieve 1 meter accuracy. Maverick, Martel, the old Condor, Raptor, SLAMER differential GPS, TV with or without man in the loop etc. All that is needed is to 'super size' them. An extraction of a MOAB sized weapon from a C130 being one option. A C-130 penetrating 1400 miles of PRC airspace and delivering a MOAB, huh? Get a grip. And doesn't "differential GPS" require both quite a bit of time and some post-processing? The MOAB launch vehicle and system is what is interesting. Taiwan I expect does have C130s and this suggests that extracting a 10 ton missile by parachute from a cargo plane is possible. Perhaps 20 tons is possible from a C130? MOAB is a freefall device. I would envisage a missile more akin to either skybolt or blue steel to give the necessary standoff capabillity. And doesn't "differential GPS" require both quite a bit of time and some post-processing It only needs to update and calibrate an inertial platform. One advanced version of SCUD has a TV guidence system to reduce the accruacy to well below 50 meters. (Using a trident missile for this sort of business with a penetrating warhead is another option) Taiwan has neither Scuds not Tridents. Scud lacks enough of a warhead, too. In WW2 apart from the fact that the carrier aircraft were impossibly vulnerable And a C-130 lumbering through PLA and PLAAF defended territory would not be?! Yes, well rather a lot of standoff capability would be needed. Brooks the Germans could have carried out such attacks with Fritz-X from around 1943 onwards and the Americans with AZON/RAZON. The Kehl-Strassbourg guidence system was compromised after the capture of some missiles in Italy but variations of the guidence system to restore immunity were also possible and plans existed to use the missile on the 2 seat 4 engined version of the Arado 234C jet bomber and thus the Germans would have had a delivery vehicle for such a weapon.. The Fritz-X was a little small: being half the mass of highball. AZON's main use seems to have been attacks against railway lines in the far east in a role it was highly effective. (23% hit rate). This CLOS type of guidence could have placed a bomb behined a damwall. |
#7
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![]() "Eunometic" wrote in message om... "Kevin Brooks" wrote in message ... "Eunometic" wrote in message ... snip more of Arndt's unsupported fantasies The reason for the 'bouncing bomb' was surely that it was the ony way that a large charge could be placed accurately. There are at least half a dozen different guidence methods in service in various types of missile that can achieve 1 meter accuracy. Maverick, Martel, the old Condor, Raptor, SLAMER differential GPS, TV with or without man in the loop etc. All that is needed is to 'super size' them. An extraction of a MOAB sized weapon from a C130 being one option. A C-130 penetrating 1400 miles of PRC airspace and delivering a MOAB, huh? Get a grip. And doesn't "differential GPS" require both quite a bit of time and some post-processing? The MOAB launch vehicle and system is what is interesting. Taiwan I expect does have C130s and this suggests that extracting a 10 ton missile by parachute from a cargo plane is possible. Perhaps 20 tons is possible from a C130? Neither "missile" would be capable of breaching TG. For gosh sakes, people, TG is a friggin' GRAVITY dam--its a large concrete monolith! Folks keep comparing this to the Ruhr dams--but weren't they *arch* dams? One hell of a difference between the cross sectional depth of an arch structure and that of a gravity structure. Again, get a grip on reality. MOAB is a freefall device. I would envisage a missile more akin to either skybolt or blue steel to give the necessary standoff capabillity. Great, now you have a standoff capability with a puny warhead that can't do anymore than scab the concrete. And doesn't "differential GPS" require both quite a bit of time and some post-processing It only needs to update and calibrate an inertial platform. No, I believe you are talking about two different things. Differential GPS is the process used by surveyors to acheive sub-meter (centimeter?) level accuracy, and it requires positioning of ground transponders and some degree of post processing support. One advanced version of SCUD has a TV guidence system to reduce the accruacy to well below 50 meters. (Using a trident missile for this sort of business with a penetrating warhead is another option) Taiwan has neither Scuds not Tridents. Scud lacks enough of a warhead, too. In WW2 apart from the fact that the carrier aircraft were impossibly vulnerable And a C-130 lumbering through PLA and PLAAF defended territory would not be?! Yes, well rather a lot of standoff capability would be needed. Again, you trade standoff for warhead load; acheiveing standoff means you are not going to have enough whumpf! to do the job against a monolithic concrete gravity dam of the size of TG. Brooks snip |
#8
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In article ,
"Kevin Brooks" wrote: Neither "missile" would be capable of breaching TG. For gosh sakes, people, TG is a friggin' GRAVITY dam--its a large concrete monolith! Folks keep comparing this to the Ruhr dams--but weren't they *arch* dams? Nope. They were arch-*shaped*, but the Moehne and Eder were gravity dams. Oddly enough, the RAF officers who thought the mission wouldn't work in 1943 were saying pretty much the same things you're saying now. "The bombs aren't big enough, you can't put them in place, the risk isn't worth it..." -- cirby at cfl.rr.com Remember: Objects in rearview mirror may be hallucinations. Slam on brakes accordingly. |
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![]() "Chad Irby" wrote in message ... In article , "Kevin Brooks" wrote: Neither "missile" would be capable of breaching TG. For gosh sakes, people, TG is a friggin' GRAVITY dam--its a large concrete monolith! Folks keep comparing this to the Ruhr dams--but weren't they *arch* dams? Nope. They were arch-*shaped*, but the Moehne and Eder were gravity dams. Your inability to understand the basics of civil engineering continues to be in evidence. Why do you think they included the arch design in those dams? To reduce the required volume of material in their construction! Think load paths... Note that TG is a pure gravity design, on the other hand. Oh, and BTW, you keep using these Ruhr dams an example, but I believe they have another distinct difference exhibited in comparison to TG--they are *masonry* (or lesser) structures (Mohne listed as masonry only, Eder as masonry-rubble, and Sohne as *earthen* with a simple concrete core wall), not reinforced concrete structures like TG is. And... I found some references to the cross sectional depth of TG, and it appears my seat-of-the-pants estimate is a hell of a lot closer than you claimed (I believe you were indicating I was off by a factor of about 100%)--my estimate was 122 meters, and there are quite a few sources out there in Googleland that indicate it is indeed "over 100 meters". The Mohne had a base "thickness" (masonry) of some 34 meters, versus the "over 100 meters" (of rf concrete) of the TG. It looks like TG is about three times as massive as taiwansecurity.org/Reu/2004/Reuters-160604.htm Now, what exactly again is the basis for your comparison of the Ruhr dams and TG? None that I can see... Oddly enough, the RAF officers who thought the mission wouldn't work in 1943 were saying pretty much the same things you're saying now. "The bombs aren't big enough, you can't put them in place, the risk isn't worth it..." Since, as has been shown, you are talking about *much* smaller dams, of *much* smaller thickness, made of materials which exhibit *less* structural integrity than the RC used in TG, your point would be...? Brooks -- cirby at cfl.rr.com |
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