One more challenge by . This time he asked for a infantry portable Multi Rocket Launcher with 90mm rounds and very very long range.
So here is the Kerberus, made inspired in the US M202A1 (the thing more similar to a portable MRL I could find...).
The Kerberus can be folded and carried like a big bag. To fire, its back part have to be unfolded and loaded with ammo. The front door have to be open and the shooter can add an iron sights/ scope to the side he use to shoot (left for right shoulder, right for left shoulder).
Despite the weight and cumbersome appearance, the Kerberus is recoiless, and the shooter hardly feels the weapon moving while shooting, allowing a teammate to rearm and add new ammo by the back of the gun, without losing sight of the target.
Kerberus can fire any 90mm ammo, including TPA warheads and anti-tank HEAT missiles, but its more powerful with the standart Kerberus 3 stages gyrojet missiles, the HADES ammo.
HADES ammo is made of three gyrojet rockets fit together in a artillery case. It fires from explosion inside the Kerberus, and when the internal system detects the rocket reached terminal velocity, it activates the internal fuel system. When the first stage fuel is out, it detaches and a second fuel system engage. The third and last stage is a warhead, usually filled with flechette (anti-infantry) or solid tungsten (anti-armor). It also can be exchanged for TPA incendiary warhaeads or even small nuclear capsules (Dirt bomb).
The HADES ammo, used with the Kerberus, can reach up to 10 km (or even more if shot in angle), but it cannot correct its course in the air, so the range is restricted to sight and direct aim, or artillery fire by coordinates and angle. It can fire 4 HADES rounds at once or one per second
Hate to be in the sights of one of those, and i would think twice before getting into a tank, even if it has bolted armour with overlapping tugesten steel plates 3 inches thick.
Anyways, unlike most of your designs, it /might/ work, but it'd suck.
Oh yes! Better to just get an airplane
Obrigado
Os Estados Unidos usaram um troço parecido com esse no Vietnam, até apareceu em um filme do Arnold Schuaizneeager uma vez