Bomber vs fighter

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The YB-40 and XB-41 concepts were failures...

They were so heavy, they were unable to keep up with the standard bombers after they had dropped their bomb load.

A good idea but a failure...

And so slow in the climb they were difficult to form up with
 
The YB-40 and XB-41 concepts were failures...

They were so heavy, they were unable to keep up with the standard bombers after they had dropped their bomb load.

A good idea but a failure...
why dont they just let yb-40 fly together instead of with normal bomber ? , i mean with 30 machine gun and heavy armor they seem quite invulnerable
 
 
why dont they just let yb-40 fly together instead of with normal bomber ? , i mean with 30 machine gun and heavy armor they seem quite invulnerable

Why would you attack an aeroplane that has no bombs? even a formation of them.
 
Why would you attack an aeroplane that has no bombs? even a formation of them.

oh yeah , just realise that they can't carry bomb , but wait they actually faster than b-17
YB-40
Maximum speed: 292 mph (470 km/h)
Cruise speed: 196 mph (315 km/h)
B-17G
Maximum speed: 287 mph (249 kn, 462 km/h)
Cruise speed: 182 mph (158 kn, 293 km/h)
also it unlikely that the German know which airplane have bomb and which one doesn't
 

There was some additional "armor" in the in the form of nylon antiballistic mats. These seem to be intended as protection against FLAK fragments and would probably not handle a hot round. I bought some surplus mats for protection against failed automotive flywheels. Fortunately, I have no idea if they would have helped.
 
why dont they just let yb-40 fly together instead of with normal bomber ? , i mean with 30 machine gun and heavy armor they seem quite invulnerable
Only a few were field modified with a higher number of MG, the standard build included about 14 .50 cal. MG.
These positions were:
Chin turret: 2x.50
Dorsal turret: 2x.50
Ventral turret: 2x.50
Starboard waist: 2x.50
Port waist: 2x.50
Ball turret: 2x.50
Tail: 2x.50
Total: 14x.50
Standard field upfit: "Cheek" positions restored (1x.50 per side) brought the total number to 16x.50


So because with all the additional turrets and ammunition aboard, the aircraft wouldn't be able to carry the additional weight of bombs. Also keep in mind that the YB-40 was not only carrying more weapons, ammunition and armor but it was also suffering from decreased aerodynamics because of it's additional armament.

YB-40:
Empty Weight: 54,900lbs. (24,900kg)
Loaded Weight: 63,500lbs. (28,800kg)
Ammunition total: 10,700 (+/-) rounds

B-15G:
Empty Weight: 36,135lbs. (16,391kg)
Loaded Weight: 54,000lbs. (24,500kg)
 
Wonder if results would be better the other way around - no defensive armament - returns us to the Mosquito strategic bomber thread.
 
Wonder if results would be better the other way around - no defensive armament - returns us to the Mosquito strategic bomber thread.
Even the Mosquito ran into trouble by interceptors on occasion.

It would take some serious engineering to get something the size of a B-17 to outrun fighters...it's possible but I don't think practical.
 
Wonder if results would be better the other way around - no defensive armament - returns us to the Mosquito strategic bomber thread.

After the RAF started using the Mosquito they never ordered a defensive gun on a bomber. Bearing in mind that 50% of bomber losses were to flak, maybe a better strategy would be to make those bombers fly higher and faster, that is with no defense apart from speed and height with enough escorts to protect.. Teas I know...another thread.
 
It's plenty if you put them on target and a B-17 is a relatively easy aerial target. However you are likely to run out of ammo after downing a couple aircraft

Going on the Luftwaffe's experience of a 2-3 % hit rate, expending 120 rounds of 20mm should result in 3-4 hits, about one fifth of the number of hits considered necessary to achieve a 50% chance of bringing a fortress down. So you would have to be about five times as good (or lucky as the average LW pilot to have a 50/50 chance of knocking down one Fortress, and ten times as good to get two - unless there is something about the 1 v 1 scenario that tips things hugely in the fighters favour.
I am disinclined to dismiss the Luftwaffe's conclusions. These guys were a very professional force and they were collating data to support operational decisions, not for misinformation or propaganda. They were the only air force ever tasked with tackling heavy bombers on a regular basis and it was in their interests to get the best data they could. Given that modern crash site evaluations can often narrow causes down to a single failed component, I don't have any trouble believing the Luftwaffe should have gotten a reasonable handle on the number of hits on a B-17 wreck. I've never seen the actual report and I don't read German anyway, but unless the report can be disproven or the methodology brought into doubt, it seems reasonable to use it as a benchmark
 

but according to statistic they still faster , even if they are alittle bit slower than b-17 without bomb can the b-17 fly a bit slower for the yb-40 t catch up with them ?
 
but according to statistic they still faster , even if they are alittle bit slower than b-17 without bomb can the b-17 fly a bit slower for the yb-40 t catch up with them ?

From what I have read here on this forum the YB 40 was heavier than a loaded B17 and the extra guns produced more drag they were slower to the target and from the target, the chronic rate of climb made real problems joining up in formation.
 
but according to statistic they still faster , even if they are alittle bit slower than b-17 without bomb can the b-17 fly a bit slower for the yb-40 t catch up with them ?

I suspect the best defence of all would always be to get out of the danger zone ASAP - loitering so a YB-40 could keep up would be counterproductive
 

Not quite true. Depends on how you classify the Lincoln bomber or when it was ordered. The RAF also used B-29s as the Washington.

Higher and faster works to some extent but runs into lousier bomb accuracy which means (for targets smaller than a large city) more bombers needed to get same number of hits and more bombers means more losses. Strangely enough a single B-17 sometimes had an option available to it for evading enemy fighters. If running light ( bombs gone and around 1/2 fuel) and starting at close to 30,000ft it could actually out climb a number of different fighter types.
 

The reports I have read don't say a 50/50 chance of knocking down a B-17 with 20 rounds - merely that the estimate is 20 20mm rounds to knock out a B17, and that 4-5 20 mm rounds from the front would down a B-17.

That's 800 rounds fired for a non-frontal assault, or 180 rounds for a frontal assault.

I'd also guess the low chance to hit comes from pilots firing out of range or at least effective range, you more rookie pilots or those that are afraid to close.

More skilled pilots would get more rounds on target, less skilled of course less.

I think I remember reading where Saburo Sakai stated they changed to head on attacks against the B-17's.
 

That has led to permutations for strikes, the so called Hi-Lo-Hi or Hi-Lo-Lo approach, over target and withdrawal. It is correct, in a general sense, that since the war, dedicated bombers have overwhelmingly sged their defensive guns and use speed and altitude to try and survive, along with various passive defences.
 
I'd also guess the low chance to hit comes from pilots firing out of range or at least effective range, you more rookie pilots or those that are afraid to close

There are permutations on this as well. Some really experienced and exceptional pilots like hartmann could shoot out the centre of a dime at three miles. They were the really deadly one. but if you have a standard mount in which the armament is calibrated to converge at 250m and you start shooting at 500m, straght away you are going to reduce the possible hit rate to about 1/6 of what heat your mount is carrying. You need to have your mount set up properly to fire at a given range, or converge at a given range. its better to overestimate your convergence needs than to underestimate, because firing at ranges less than the convergence will be a lesser grouping, but still a grouping, and not sprayed allover the sky.
 

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