Those look great especially that Rail Gun...wow.
I just had to check if there were any videos of this gun firing and located the one below along with one that tours a refurbished one in our day. I was very surprised the the recoil of the gun didn't move the trucks more. I am always amazed at the know how of this era can shoot one of these at a target 50 miles away and still be close without computers or laser guidance.
Ah I see spoils of war :-)
I remember combat Carl from toy story 3 :-)
Happily collecting things all my life...
What I don't understand about this weapon is that the cannon isn't on a turret which, if it was, the whole thing would probably tip over with the recoil if it was fired to the side. If this is so, the only way to aim it was to have the tracks facing the right direction which would be a far fetched coincidence. This being said, was this weapon really only made for a stationary, turntable, site like the one in the video above and not specifically used as a mobile artillery piece but just an easy way to transport a cannon from site to site (turntable to turn table) so they wouldn't have to lose a valuable piece in case it was evident that the enemy was going to take the site or if more power was needed at a different front. In which case they would save the cannon and not lose it like they would a fixed cannon and also much cheaper saving on steel and they only have to build the turntables at the different defense positions.. This could only be done where existing track line are or they would have to build more rails. But in this case that wouldn't be that hard as the Germans used slave labor.
I think you'd find the real gun also had a limited amount of lateral movement built in as well as elevation. Which combined with the distance it was firing, just a couple of degrees either side would cover a massive area
Happily collecting things all my life...
@ Super:
Yes, that was a big limitation of real railway guns. They could be devastating in combat but they were extremely difficult to traverse. IIRC, the guns deployed in France were the ones basically emplaced in static defense positions with a purpose built railroad turntable used to traverse them. Like you said, they could lay new line or use existing lines to redeploy the guns. But otherwise, they were either used for coastal defense, like in Sicily or France, or as a siege weapon against cities, like in Russia.
It’s an odd paradox but for an apparently mobile weapon, they were mostly useful in static roles.