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Again as long as 'tactics' isn't a catchall to explain everything that simple paper comparisons, or theoretical simplified calcs, or a few anecdotes, won't explain. Is tactics a factor?, sure, but I think it's repeatedly used as such a catchall.HoHun,
I agree with you 100% on your take on tactics. It was mentioned earlier in this thread that the Hurricane did much better vs the Japanese planes in 1943 and onwards. The Hurris were the same, but the Oscars were all type II and type III, much better planes, (type III 360 mph) so the difference in results has to be tactics.
Joe,JoeB said:In short I just don't see the data with which to exactly and certainly describe why the F4F had a much better combat record against Japanese fighters than the Hurricane did in 1942, which is one certain fact.
Recent research appears to support Erik Shilling's strong argument that the AVG aircraft were very close to the P-40B configuration, which the British designated as the Tomahawk IIA. The history of the AVG fighters is nearly as interesting as the story of the AVG itself...
...Allison was running at 100% capacity. Simply stated, there weren't any extra engines to be had. Every block and cylinder head was already allocated to an existing contract. But, wait a minute, there were plenty of rejected blocks, cylinder heads and such. Allison realized that most of the rejected engine components were usable if the various parts were hand matched and fitted. They set up a production line and began assembling these engines. Individual parts were reworked and carefully matched. The results of this procedure were engines built to very tight tolerances. Essentially, these were 'blueprinted' engines. Dyno tests revealed that they produced as much as 220 hp more than the production line V-1710-33s going into the RAF Tomahawks and USAAF P-40C fighters. Allison had produced some very powerful and very expensive engines. Fortunately they were allowed to bury the extra cost into contracts for U.S. aircraft. These engines certainly account for the performance of the AVG's Tomahawks. In general terms, the AVG fighters could pull up to 370 mph in level flight, which is reasonable considering that these aircraft had 20% more power and less weight than the British Tomahawk IIB. Another fact not picked up on as significant by historians was the high rate of reduction gear failures in the AVG aircraft. This is easily explained when you realize that the older style reduction gear was rated for no more than 1,100 hp. With as much as 1,250 hp on tap, the reduction gearbox was over-stressed and frequently stripped gears. Later models, with 1,200 hp engines were fitted with a much stronger spur gear design that could handle up to 1,600 hp. This is the major reason that the nose is shorter from the P-40D onward.
Most F4F operations v Zeroes in 1942 were landbased from Guadalcanal. With all due respect, how serious a discussion could this possibly be if we're starting out arguing very basic stuff like that.It really comes down to numbers, and the wildcat never faced the overwhelming numbers the Hurricanes did. The wildcats operations against the zero were primarily in carrier vs carrier actions where the numbers were much more closely matched.
1. You should go and re-read that book. One important point he makes is chess-like tactics have become a lot more important in the age of afterburning jets because they take a lot more time to complete manuevers (like a 360 deg turn) than WWII a/c and far more than WWI. WWI as Shaw says was largely reflexes and gunnery, modern jet combat is chess like tactics and weapons that guide themselves, WWII was somewhere in between.Hi Joeb,
1. Here ab interesting from the preface of Robert Shaw's "Fighter Combat - Tactics and Maneuvering". In case you do not know the book: It has been called the fighter pilots' bible - by fighter pilots.
2. >theoretical simplified calcs
More propaganda.
3. And in fact, "dissing" an engineenering analysis you have not even looked into is pretty low and makes you look stupid.
4.
1), the "engineering analysis of performance data" shows a superiority of the Hurricane IIB over the F4F-4.
2), I have never read about the British (or Commonwealth) pilots being innately inferior to the US aviators.
So what remains? Simple enough: 3), tactics.
I really don't understand all that dancing around the obvious.
And then ...
6. >Again as long as 'tactics' isn't a catchall
>I think it's repeatedly used as such a catchall.
>So if we look at tactics as an actual factual topic, not a catchall
versus ...
>IMO, lots of other factors come in, not just 'tactics'.
>more subtle factors of the plane itself in favor of the F4F
>So '*has to be*' tactics, after exhausting IMHO a pretty short list of other factors
If you go on talking about "other factors" without ever specifying one, you should better be careful with the abundant use of the word "catchall".
(HoHun)
The good adaptation of USN planes to such deflection shooting was one reason the pilots were specifically trained in it, almost no other air arms did so formally.
In the theatre in question, all three airforces taught deflection shooting, I've seen the RAF manual, it's quite indepth, and I've read several accounts about Japanese training in marksmanship.
RAAF Gunnery Manual, September 1943...That is interesting. It is a different manual than the RAF one, different graphics (better IMO). Just goes to show that Commonwealth airforces were independant and not just fragments of the RAF.
The best deflection shot of any of the western allies was a RCAF pilot named Buerling who flew against top notch German pilots with equal or better aircraft in a scenario that was IMHO far more hazardous then the SW Pacific.It is a myth that none of the Allies knew what the best tactics to use against the Zero were until the captured Aleutian Island Zero was tested. The formal preliminary report on the Zero's performance was forwarded to BuAer on 31 October, 1942. By then the battles of Coral Sea and Midway had been fought and the battles around and over Guadalcanal were either already fought or were at their peak. It is also a myth that the Hellcat design was based on the tests of the Aleutian Zero. On 6 October the pilot testing that Zero stated: "The general impression of the airplane is exactly as originally created by intelligence-including the performance." The performance of the USN and Marine pilots in F4Fs against crack JNAF pilots flying Zeros during 1942 is plenty of evidence that those pilots knew what tactics to use to defeat the Zero. The Wildcat had a down angle of 6.5 degrees of vision which was necessary for FULL deflection shooting. In Lundstrom's "The First Team" in appendix 2, fundamentals of fixed aerial gunnery, there is a full explanation which explains why pre war USN pilots were much more proficient at deflection shooting than the pilots of any other air force. The diagram showing an RAF fighter demonstrating deflection shooting is a low side attack which does not require good visibility over the nose. It is not a full deflection shot and it is not a desirable firing pass. "Full deflection approaches gave the fighter pilots tremendous advantage over defending gunners, presenting them with such return fire angles that the gunners faced "one hell of a time finding the lead." " The pilots of the USN and Marines were virtually the only fighter pilots trained from the beginning to utilize and regularly succeed in deflection shooting." " With the partial exception of the IJN, no other air forces during WW2 taught their pilots how to make full deflection shots." Page 531 of Lundstrom's "The First Team and the Guadalcanal Campaign" says it all IMO and explains the apparent disparity in the performance in the early part of the war between the F4F and it's pilots and the other services with their various aircraft against the Zero. "In all of WW2 no one did their job more "smartly" than the pilots of the US Navy."
The diagram showing an RAF fighter demonstrating deflection shooting is a low side attack which does not require good visibility over the nose. It is not a full deflection shot...
It does seem to use a Do-17 bomber as the target a/c though, which would imply it was probably made by the RAF...
I did some measurements on 3-angle views of Wildcat and Hurricane, and on some select photographs of the two planes in level flight from similar camera angles and I don't get any difference in angle of view over the nose for these two planes.