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Actually I was referring to the MG151/20.
I would agree with this. The probability of two strikes of the F9F is 69% and of five strikes of the F-86 is a bit better at 75%, so, this is a good point of rough equality in fire power if the Navy is accurate in their analysis.davparir: to be more precise, at 5% the F9F would be 2 hits x 3 damage for a factor of 6, while the F86 would be 5 hits x 1 damage for a factor of 5, which is an advantage to the F9F. At 10% it would be 6 for the F9F, 7 for the F86. They should be equal somewhere between those two percentages.
It's interesting that one of the arguments for mgs vs cannons is that the mgs have higher rate of fire and give a 'pattern' which should increase the probability of a hit, particularly from a less skilled pilot.....yet it has been many many times argued that the centerline armament configuration is superior to wing gun configuration because the 'pattern' of the wing guns is held to be less lethal!
As already mentioned, these guns fire at a 1500 r/min rate or 6000 r/min total, or equivalent to an M61 Gatling gun. This is much more powerful than the six 50 cals previously used and twice the the rate of the F9F.With the F86H they finally went to the M39 20mm cannon. Question is, did they switch to the cannon because they now had effective radar sights which took away the advantage of the 'pattern' from the .50s and ensured shot placement from the slowwwwwer firing 20mms? Or did the radar sights eliminate that last excuse for hanging on to the much loved.50s?
The MG 151 had a lower MV and a worse ballistic coefficient than the .50 which means longer flight times and more deflection needed. Rate of fire was better than the Hispano but not quite as good as the .50 so the .50 is easier to hit with.
Now your are proving my point. 6 to 8 .50 cal worked, there was not an overwhelming need to change, unlike 8 x .303.
US Navy stopped ordering planes with .50cal machine guns in the winter of 1944/45. They took delivery of previous orders for quite some time...
In 1944-45, the USN found that 20 mm shells were too light to stop Japanese Kamikaze planes and the higher approach speeds of these planes made manually controlled guns obsolete. As a result, Oerlikons were replaced by 40 mm Bofors where ever possible during 1944-45 and removed entirely from most US ships by the mid-1950s.
10 fighter designs BEFORE the Crusader. Why don't you count up the post war piston engine planes, both fighters and attack aircraft and add in the Navy jet attack and bombers armed with 20mm guns before the Crusader ever flew?
Its rrobably more accurate to say that the change from 6 x 0.5 to 4 x 20mm was to improve effectiveness not just range or firepower but a combination of both. Either way, the important thing was that the change to 20mm was the way forward.The most numerous and successful US fighter on Korea was the F-86 Sabre, most with 6x .50 cal. The wish to move to move on the Sabre to 20mm was mainly for range not firepower.