Electromagnetic Railguns: Proof of a Flat Plane?

Naval railguns are some of the most advanced, high-powered, and precise long-range weapons ever developed. They fire projectiles at speeds exceeding Mach 7 (over 5,000 mph) using pure electromagnetic force—no explosives, no chemical propellants—just raw energy.

The U.S. Navy has publicly tested these weapons, with reports showing they can hit targets well over 100 miles away with pinpoint accuracy. But there’s a major problem if you believe in the globe model.

Curvature Makes These Weapons Impossible

If the Earth were truly a spinning ball with a curvature of 8 inches per mile squared, then a projectile fired 100+ miles would have to “arc” over a supposed drop of more than a mile.

That means:
⚡ The Navy would have to make constant mid-course corrections for curvature—yet they don’t.
⚡ The targeting computers would need real-time adjustments for the supposed curve—yet official military documents don’t account for it.
⚡ The railgun’s trajectory should be an exaggerated curve—yet every recorded test shows a straight-line trajectory through the atmosphere.

China’s Railguns Are Pushing the Limits Even Further

While the U.S. has led the development of railguns in the past, China is now taking the technology even further. Reports suggest that Chinese military scientists are:

🔹 Doubling the range—meaning new railguns could fire 200+ miles with pinpoint accuracy.
🔹 Increasing projectile weight—allowing heavier, more powerful rounds to travel extreme distances.
🔹 Improving barrel durability—so the guns can fire many more shots before needing maintenance.

The farther these railguns fire, the less sense the globe model makes. If the supposed curvature drop at 100 miles is already over a mile, then at 200+ miles, it should be over five miles. And yet, these weapons continue to fire in a straight line.

Sea Level, Not "Sea Curve"

The reason railguns work flawlessly over long distances is simple—they’re firing across a flat plane, not a curved ball. The entire principle behind naval warfare relies on the fact that ships can see and hit each other across vast distances without adjusting for the impossible drop-off a globe requires.

If curvature were real:
🔹 A ship over the horizon would be out of range unless targeting systems factored in a massive gravitational arc.
🔹 Every long-range weapon, from artillery to missiles to railguns, would have to account for drop—but they don’t.
🔹 The radar and targeting systems on these ships work line-of-sight—which wouldn’t be possible on a curved surface.

Flat Plane World Makes More Sense

Naval railguns are real-world proof that we aren’t living on a spinning ball. These weapons fire too far, hit too accurately, and work too efficiently for the globe model to hold up.

The only way they can fire in a straight line and still hit targets over 100 miles away?
Because the Earth is flat.