Shortround6
Lieutenant General
The problems with the Hispano were varied and somewhat installation dependent.Considering how long it took for the Hispano to get into a usable shape, why are we assuming some other new guns would have such an amazingly short and trouble free gestation? Seems, uh, optimistic?
The gun was designed to be bolted to an over 1000lb engine. Bolting it inside a wing was a problem.
The gun was designed to mounted upright with the drum on top feeding down. Flopping it over 90 degrees and feeding from the side caused problems.
The gun was designed for the fired cases to be ejected downwards. When flopped on it's side and fitted with a chute with a 90 degree bend in it to direct the fired cases downwards some cases didn't get around the bend in the chute and clear the way for the following cases.
The gun may have required oiled/greased ammo which gave trouble at higher altitudes in cold air. Not as bad in warmer air. Later solved by making the chamber shorter (which the Americans ignored and built their guns to French chamber dimensions).
Not saying upright guns would have been trouble free but would not be the headache that Spitfire guns were.
Which does not invalidated your point about other guns.
Or the advantages of AA guns having several men who can assist in moving the Breechblock back and forth in cold/wet conditions vs trying to pull on handle (one handed) with several meters of cable between the gun and the pilot. Or needing powered cocking system/s?