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As a side note, during my research I found that Spitfires that experienced jamming with one of their two wing-mounted 20mm cannons were actually being yawed by the recoil of the other. So that speaks to how much recoil a fully-automatic 20mm weapon produces.
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Unless guns are somehow restricted if any two guns have different rates of fire they will eventually fire at the same time, I presume any set of guns fired by the same button will start of firing at nominally the same time anyway.
Too bad, as desynching would double the coverage and increase the chance of hits. Thanks for your help!
How can desynching the weapons (which were never synchronised on any British aircraft anyway) achieve this? Please explain.
Are you confusing synchronisation of firing time and harmonisation of aiming point? There was plenty of discussion, and plenty of paper generated about the latter.
Cheers
Steve
I believe he's saying that a stream of bullets from guns firing at separate times (like a single gun with two/three times the rof) would be more difficult to fly through than clumps of bullets fired at the same time. The clumps would do more damage if they hit something crossing the line of fire but the steady stream would be more likely to hit.
The gun camera and ground films show the Navy planes strafing Jap Positions to fire all four guns in synchronized manner! It seems that the interval between shots at only 600 R/M is so small that the muzzle blasts seem to be synchronized for the entire burst. IIRC, there were four American planes that used four 20s to see war service. Early A-36 (Mustangs), later Bearcats, and Corsairs and the Tigercat? Can not remember if the last actually saw any service late in the War?It probably wasn't necessary. You have enough trouble getting the guns to fire at exactly the same time to begin with for the first shot let alone the following shots. Most aircraft guns fired "open bolt" which means the bolt is held the rearward position. When the "trigger" is pressed in the cockpit a signal has to be sent to the guns, Usually electric to a solenoid (or to pneumatic or hydraulic systems) to release the bolt/s which moved forward under spring pressure feeding a round into the chamber and releasing the firing pin once the bolt was in position.
Not all springs had the same tension or moved the bolts at the same speed. Not all firing pin springs moved the firing pins at the same speed. And once the cap was hit not all primers ignited the charge with the same speed and not all powder charges burned at exactly the same rate. The last is why large 30mm cannon were never synchronized to fire though propeller discs. Actually, the Germans had a weapons tray that mounted instead of the belly bomb rack and fired one or the other of the big 30s threw the prop disk of the Fw-190! The large powder charges showed too much variation in the time from cap strike to round exiting the barrel. Please note that this is different than a variation in velocity of the projectiles.
Cycle rates shown in books are an average of many guns, It was not unheard of for some guns to be off quite a bit from the nominal "book" rating. Some faster, some slower.
Given all the naturally occurring variations in firing rates/times it would seem that spending much time devices to do it on purpose would be a waste of time.
If you are worried about recoil forces damaging the plane investing in better mounts, like buffered ones, would seem to be a better use of time/man power.
Wing mounted guns were "Harmonized", or "Synchronized" such that each gun was pointed to put it's bullets under the Pipper at some very specific range! The Brits who fought the BoB with eight Rifle Caliber Machine Guns chose 200 yards for the most part, although there were other schemes, they were never very popular as they diluted the damage that the eight guns all pointed at the same target at the same range. We Americans with our larger .50 Caliber Heavy Machine Guns chose 400 yards for the most part although some of the Aces preferred to synchronize them all at 600 Yards. The P-38 and all of the German planes with nose mounted guns all chose 600 Meters, or yards for the P-38. At 720 meters, the trajectory of the P-38's guns sighted on the center of the target fighter plane, never rose to miss the top of the canopy, or fell low enough to miss the belly giving the longest point blank range of the War!Hi, I joined to ask a question about wing-mounted gun synchronization (or desync, actually). Please note this has nothing to do with propeller synchronization, which is the most common topic when I searched.
I had always thought multi-gun installations on wings had their firing normally desynchronized (ripple-firing) to reduce the stress on the wing structure. For example, the quad-cannon fighters like the British Firefly and the American P-51A and F8F-1B - it seems that firing twin 20mm in sync would have generated a lot of vibration and stress.
But in looking to confirm my assumption, I can't find any actual data via basic searching. All I get are redundant articles about gun-propeller sync mechanisms. Can someone give me some leads on where I might find this information? Credible references would be fantastic
Thanks for any help!
Mil
Wing mounted guns were "Harmonized", or "Synchronized" such that each gun was pointed to put it's bullets under the Pipper at some very specific range! The Brits who fought the BoB with eight Rifle Caliber Machine Guns chose 200 yards for the most part, although there were other schemes, they were never very popular as they diluted the damage that the eight guns all pointed at the same target at the same range. We Americans with our larger .50 Caliber Heavy Machine Guns chose 400 yards for the most part although some of the Aces preferred to synchronize them all at 600 Yards. The P-38 and all of the German planes with nose mounted guns all chose 600 Meters, or yards for the P-38. At 720 meters, the trajectory of the P-38's guns sighted on the center of the target fighter plane, never rose to miss the top of the canopy, or fell low enough to miss the belly giving the longest point blank range of the War!