Gents,
Looking at the diagram of the B-17 field of fire, and sticking to the one v one scenario I would attack it from either the pure vertical (least amount of weapons that can be brought to bear) or from head on. Reading on it seems that the Japanese did exactly the same thing (as did the Germans at least from the front). If I had a longer ranged weapons than the bomber, I would take out the offending tail / belly turret then work the plane over from below and behind (highest probability of quality hits on it).
Change the scenario to 2 versus 2 (fighters versus bombers) and the odds slew more in favor of the fighter. Use a tactic of both fighters attacking one bomber at a time from the side (minimize the additional effectiveness of both the supporting bomber and the attackee) by giving them two targets to shoot at near or simultaniously.
Change the scenario further to many versus many and you have the air war over Europe. Yes the bomber in box type formations has the highest odds of survival, but add escort and the odds increase dramatically (history speaks to that). Hence the Germans continously looking for longer ranged / more destructive fighter armaments (the longer the "stick" the more time the offender / attacker has exclusive shooting / employment opportunities). Or, it's better to shoot first...
The weakest part of any airplane is the pilot (most suseptable to gunfire). Kill both of them and the dinosaur dies even if it's body doesn't know it yet.
Cheers,
Biff
Looking at the diagram of the B-17 field of fire, and sticking to the one v one scenario I would attack it from either the pure vertical (least amount of weapons that can be brought to bear) or from head on. Reading on it seems that the Japanese did exactly the same thing (as did the Germans at least from the front). If I had a longer ranged weapons than the bomber, I would take out the offending tail / belly turret then work the plane over from below and behind (highest probability of quality hits on it).
Change the scenario to 2 versus 2 (fighters versus bombers) and the odds slew more in favor of the fighter. Use a tactic of both fighters attacking one bomber at a time from the side (minimize the additional effectiveness of both the supporting bomber and the attackee) by giving them two targets to shoot at near or simultaniously.
Change the scenario further to many versus many and you have the air war over Europe. Yes the bomber in box type formations has the highest odds of survival, but add escort and the odds increase dramatically (history speaks to that). Hence the Germans continously looking for longer ranged / more destructive fighter armaments (the longer the "stick" the more time the offender / attacker has exclusive shooting / employment opportunities). Or, it's better to shoot first...
The weakest part of any airplane is the pilot (most suseptable to gunfire). Kill both of them and the dinosaur dies even if it's body doesn't know it yet.
Cheers,
Biff
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