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Was the target area for the joules number just the area of the shell diameter in sqcm?Basically APCR/HVAP doesn't exist until 1941/42. Yes it was around in prototype form a bit earlier. But the British didn't get into making APCR shot for the 2pdr and 6pdr AT guns until 1943. Germans had little, (if any?) during the first months of Barbarossa.
APCR/HVAP increase the armor penetration by roughly (very roughly) 30%. this varies enormously by range. Better at very close range (thrown rock distance) and less at longer ranges until, with the smaller caliber guns the standard AP shot had better penetration somewhere between 500 and 1000 meters depending on exact gun/ammo. The Squeeze bore guns maintained the better penetration considerably longer.
for a quick method of comparing guns try calculating the Joules of energy per sq cm of target area. As in American 37mm aircraft gun 116,000 joules with a target area of 10.75 sq cm gives 10,790 joules per sq cm.
Hispano gun with a 130gram projectile has 50,000 joules of energy and just 3.14 sq cm of target area and has 15,900 joules per sq cm of target area.
Want to "bust" tanks with a P-39? yank the 37mm and fit a Hispano
For the US 37mm aircraft gun a 30% improvement on crap is still crap.
German 37mm guns on the Stuka had 208,00 joules (APT) so obviously much more energy per unit of target area.
The energy figures are at the muzzle (and gun stationary) so there will be some difference at range.
The Russian 23mm gun in the IL-2 had 77,400 joules for 18.650 joules per sq cm.
The British 2pdr tank and anti-tank had 392,000 joules of energy in one loading and had (at the muzzle) 31,210 joules per sq cm.
The Little John rounds had slightly less total energy but were concentrating it on a much smaller area, diameter of the projectile as it left the barrel was 30mm but the AP core was even smaller.
Yep, gotta keep those 30 caliber wing guns, especially to use against tanks. At least that 100lbs of armor plate guarding the reduction gear might finally come to some use.
The Soviet 37mm could have been used if the mount was forward of the ammunition magazine, which was the normal place for it. The AAF 37mm cannon was mounted directly on the longitudinal fuselage beams, quite a sturdy and economical situation. Lots of room for more ammunition even with the twin 50cal MGs in the nose.
IIRC that 37 was able to defeat 20mm of armor at 500 meters
That sums up all the issues with hitting a tank from an aircraft. All the aids that a trained gunner has on the gun he trained with, on a stationary stable stationary platform , like fine control of elevation and traverse, knowledge of range and ballistic drop and advantage of firing horizontally are missing. The pilot has to make all the fine adjustments on the whole plane and adjust them constantly as everything is changing by the second.The question is a what impact angle?
If the top of the tank is dead level (not sloped forward or back or side to side) and the plane is diving at 30 degrees and the top is 8mm thick your projectile rated at 20mm at perpendicular impact won't go through. Simple geometry says that the projectile has to go through 16mm of armor (double the thickness) but since at high angles of attack they projectile has a much greater tendency to skid/ricochet the armor usually acts about 3 times thicker.
If the sides/rear of the tank and or turret is less than 20mm thick then the 37mm gun may prove effective.
If you are diving at over 30 degrees you better be pulling out of the dive before you get to 500 meters distance from the target.
The question is a what impact angle?
If the top of the tank is dead level (not sloped forward or back or side to side) and the plane is diving at 30 degrees and the top is 8mm thick your projectile rated at 20mm at perpendicular impact won't go through. Simple geometry says that the projectile has to go through 16mm of armor (double the thickness) but since at high angles of attack they projectile has a much greater tendency to skid/ricochet the armor usually acts about 3 times thicker.
If the sides/rear of the tank and or turret is less than 20mm thick then the 37mm gun may prove effective.
If you are diving at over 30 degrees you better be pulling out of the dive before you get to 500 meters distance from the target.
The pilot has to make all the fine adjustments on the whole plane and adjust them constantly as everything is changing by the second.
Remember that the tank does not need to be penetrated and completely engulfed in flame with the crew killed instantly. A disabled, even just immobile tank is virtually useless in battle.
I'd think that the Whirlwind would be a good candidate for a 37mm cannon.
Early war tanks (across the board) were not as heavily armored as they were mid/late war.
From what I have read Typhoon rocket attacks caused many tanks to be abandoned even though they weren't actually hit. Hard to say what was a "tank" at the time. Easy to understand why some tank chassis converted to carry field guns or other would be left, but I have also seen a good few pics of tanks that dropped into holes from rocket attacks and couldn't get out. Most of a mechanised division wasn't "tanks" and the tanks went all Tigers or King Tigers anyway. In the early days of the war, like France there wasn't any air force dedicated to the task of attacking tanks and ground forces and they didn't know where they were anyway.True but trying to disable or immobilize a tank is not that easy. Yes the tracks can come off or a bogie wheel get detached but both take a fair amount of effort and.or hits in exactly the right spot.
The P-39 might have been effective on MK I and MK II tanks but they were fading from the scene in 1942 let alone 1943.
The Germans did have a fair number of open topped vehicles, like most of their SP guns and Panzerjagers and halftracks. But then if they vehicles are open topped you don't need an armor piercing cannon. A number of machine gun bullets bouncing around the interior like steel balls in a pinball machine will do the trick.
If the AP shot doesn't penetrate the armor and hit crew or ammo or propulsion system there isn't much besides the suspension and tracks to stop the vehicle. Blow off the tool box? Bend the shovel? remove the radio antenna?
The Whirlwind prototype pictured, has a 20mm cannon.Have you been playing with the Time Telephone again?? Someone at Westlands must have been listening out for your call!
Westland Whirlwind Variants and Projects
View attachment 614996
Three whiskeys in, I'm going the full Monty on this one
Take an otherwise obsolete Fairey Battle. Ditch the merlin and fit a Bristol Taurus.
No more power than the Merlin, but much lighter - and air-cooled, so no rad or associated plumbing and coolant - yet more weight saving - should be well over 500lbs.
Chop back the bloody great big greenhouse canopy to save a load more weight, ditch the third crew member and save even more - and bring the gunner up back-to-back with the pilot. Ditch the bomb aiming position site and all extraneous kit. That should even up the C of G a bit and give scope to give the crew some decent armour too in a compact space. Give the gunner a pair of Vickers K on a dual mount as per the Hampden, or dual brownings as per Douglas Havoc. Check with the boffins and look at chopping off as much off on the wingspan for purely sub 5000ft operation and to improve roll and maybe add a couple of mph. Pay attention to self sealing tanks. Maybe reduce the tankage too - this is a tactical bird - not need to have the 1000mile range of the Battle
Take a pair of hotchkiss 25mm anti tank guns. Nice and compact - and should be more than enough oompf for top attacks on early panzers. Strip them right down - lose the shield, carriage wheels etc (dunno what weight that should leave us with - but should give a reasonable reserve. Maybe use the 25 SA-L mle 1935 variant) Develop a simple cassette or magazine feed as per Vickers S or Molins.
Install said cannons in the inboard bomb nacelles in the wings - and ammo in the outers. Hopefully that massively reduces major structural issues or mods- and no draggy external pods.
There you go - a British IL-2 using clobber available in 1939 - and more than enough to knacker any tank in 1940 (I make no claims as to the toll taken by AA or fighters though!)
The Whirlwind prototype pictured, has a 20mm cannon.
There are some sources that claim it was a 37mm, but in fact, was a Hispano 20mm by itself and later, with a couple .303MGs (one to either side, above).
There was a proposal to install and trial either a 37mm or 40mm, but I haven't seen evidence that it ever happened.