Talk:Wall-mounted artillery

What is missing?
I have been questioning this lately. This article is marked as a incomplete article. My question is, does anybody know what is the missing information? Since I started on the wiki I put some edits here and there and completed the story. To sum up, what do you think it is missing on this article? And if nothing is missing, should we retire it from the category of incomplete articles? Have nice day :) Raposu (talk) 12:23, May 25, 2015 (UTC)Raposu


 * Good job. It looks complete enough to me, I just think it lacks some references. I changed the Incomplete template for References and added cite tags to the specific parts that need to be referenced.--Manuel de la Fuente (talk) 12:44, May 25, 2015 (UTC)

Non canon
About the Before the Fall development part, do we leave it as such or should we add an Other media section?Dalmatia (talk) 21:18, March 9, 2017 (UTC)


 * Before the Fall content should definitely go into an Other Media section. That non-canon fragment of the subsection is an outdated method of separating canon from non-canon material. --GodKingReiss (talk) 22:15, March 9, 2017 (UTC)

Technical corrections
Technically, the pieces are fired by pulling a Fuze with a lanyard. A firing pin is a different device found in cased and primed ammunition and is used to strike a primer. Those rifles they use are striker fired.

The effect of Rifling is much more gyroscopical than aerodynamic. Simply put, due to conservation of momentum, a thing that is spinning on it's axis will tend to keep spinning around that same axis. If propelled, the axis will tend to keep it's heading, so you align the spinning axis with the bore axis and presto, the bullet goes the way you point the barrel, obeying gravity. Precession due to gravity creates a torque that makes an anti-clockwise spinning bullet hit to the left and a clockwise one to the right, but that's not a detail crucial to the understantding of rifling.

ThauaAguirre (talk) 14:09, August 10, 2020 (UTC)