Red and green laser cannons in "Fury"

Red and green laser cannons in "Fury" - Five Assorted-color Cacti

As far as I can tell the movie "Fury" was not supposed to be sci-fi, but rather a realistic WWII movie.

Despite this, it seems that the German troops were equipped with green laser cannons and the Americans with red laser cannons.

green

green laser

red I'm a bit confused about this. Did these weapons exist in WWII? Was this the basis for the red and green lasers in Star Wars? Or how is this explained?



Best Answer

They seem to be tracer bullets, often used for instance to correct the aim while shooting. No relation with laser, of course, just a pyrotechnic effect.

As for the colours, a commenter on a gamers' forum (whose reliability I don't know about, but whose remarks seem sensible) observes:

The tracers actually looked pretty realistic for the types of weapons they were firing. Red and green are also accurate colors as were the amounts. Keep in mind countries use whatever metals are most abundant within the area to use for tracers. Germany happens to be rich in phosphorus which burns usually a bright green or bluish-green. The US/Canada happen to have a lot of strontium and sometimes will mix in a bit of magnesium to give it a bright red glow. Another reason there were a lot more tracers is most machine guns on tanks did not have the typical 4 ball ammunition to 1 tracer round, it was usually a 3:1 ratio due to gunners having to typically "free-aim" the MG instead of having a tradition traverse and elevation mechanism for better aim.

As for the abundance and outlook of the effect, it might have been tweaked a little for style purposes. A website about guns remarks:

Also, in the scene where the tank platoon rescued the pinned down infantry in the field, the tracers looked more like star wars laser beams than normal rounds. They first engaged the enemy at what had to be 600 yrds or more, but none of the rounds arched at all and they seemed to be moving at a higher velocity than what they should.




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Why do Imperial ships shoot green lasers?

Laser Colour (In-universe!) I.e., imperial lasers are blue-ish/green-ish while rebel lasers are red: If I recall, the color of a blaster bolt (character-scale or starship scale) is determined by the quality of the gas used in it - higher quality gives you green, lower quality gives you red.

What do the different colors of lasers mean in Star Wars?

The most common color was red because of its cheaper tibanna gas from Bespin. Green bolts were produced from a higher-quality gas, thus costing more. Blue bolts used ion-based charges for more effectiveness against electronic and mechanical targets, such as droids.

What are the lasers called in Star Wars?

Lightsabers. Lightsabers (also known as laser swords or rens) are described as one of the most rare and mysterious weapons of the Star Wars universe and are generally used by the Jedi, the Sith, and the Knights of Ren, with Mandalorian rulers wielding the darksaber.

Do laser cannons exist?

They are impossible, Beason said. A burst of laser light moves too fast from its source for our eyes to track as a unit. Many lasers actually consist of pulsed light, but the pulses flash by so quickly that the eye renders them as a continuous beam.



Anti-Tank Gun Fight | Fury | CineClips




More answers regarding red and green laser cannons in "Fury"

Answer 2

The United States Army, along with other nations, used tracer rounds to aim properly at enemy soldiers. This is only a pyrotechnic effect for aim correction and has no correlation to laser weapons. These types of rounds are still in use today to see where the ammunition is hitting.

I once saw a video on this topic where they had an mg-42 (a high powered German light machine gun with an extremely high rate of fire) and they fired it at night time. The tracers lit up the night sky in the most spectacular fashion, being able to see every three to five rounds fly across the range going faster than the speed of sound and then disappearing inside of the ground or in the target.

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