40mm Autocannon
40 mm Autocannon is worth mounting when the Trampler can stay fed on 40 mm shells and keep a firing lane long enough to cash in on steady auto-gun pressure.
Pristine 80 mm Naval Cannon Armored feels like the big-gun pick when the Trampler wants heavy shell pressure and expects to keep that cannon exposed under return fire.
Pristine 80 mm Naval Cannon Armored only justifies itself when the whole Trampler plan is ready to support a heavy cannon: shell storage, firing lanes, and enough repair confidence that the gun can stay in the fight. The armored body matters most on routes where the cannon will be visible and contested instead of peeking for one safe shot. If the crew cannot keep 80 mm shells stocked or the vehicle cannot hold the line long enough to fire repeatedly, the armored Pristine version asks for more than the route can give.
It comes through Trampler armament paths, then only pays off after the crew has already committed shell space and a heavy-cannon vehicle plan.
40 mm Autocannon is worth mounting when the Trampler can stay fed on 40 mm shells and keep a firing lane long enough to cash in on steady auto-gun pressure.
40 mm Autocannon Armored is worth the mount slot when the Trampler can stay fed on 40 mm shells and actually hold firing angles long enough to use the armored body.
70 mm Shotgun Cannon makes sense when your Trampler can stay loaded with standard shotgun-cannon shells and actually press close fights.
70 mm Shotgun Cannon Armored makes sense when your Trampler can stay loaded with standard shotgun-cannon shells and actually bully fights up close.
80mm Naval Cannon makes sense when your Trampler can stay fed on 80 mm shells and actually take the kind of fight where a heavy cannon matters.
80 mm Naval Cannon Armored makes sense when your Trampler can stay fed on 80 mm shells and actually take the kind of fight where a heavy cannon matters.
Experimental 2x70 mm Twin Shotgun Cannon is the unarmored T4 twin-shotgun turret, so it fits only when your Trampler can push close angles and keep the shells coming.
Experimental 2x70 mm Twin Shotgun Cannon Armored is the armored T4 twin-shotgun turret, so it only makes sense when your Trampler can actually feed a two-shell close-pressure mount.
It is strongest when the Trampler can hold a real firing lane, keep 80 mm shells moving, and let the armored cannon body survive the punishment that comes from trading big shots openly.
If shell storage is thin, repairs are already strained, or the Trampler cannot stay in cannon lanes long enough to keep firing, the armored Pristine body becomes more burden than answer.
Yes, when the route needs cannon pressure and the crew can keep it fed with 80 mm shells.
Shell supply comes first, then whether the Trampler can actually hold heavy-cannon firing lanes long enough for the armored body and Pristine tier to matter.