Conslaw
Senior Airman
The problem with using weight of fire to determine whether more guns or more bullets is better is that weight of fire presumes that each bullet in a stream is of equal importance. The US Navy and Marine norm was deflection shooting where the pilot started firing in front of the enemy aircraft and fired through the target. You have more leeway in your timing if you have more ammunition. You also are making inherent assumptions about how many shots you are going to get on a target per mission. If you assume that you will only get one shot at one target, six guns is probably better. From the British perspective in ordering the 6-gun Marlet (what would become the F4F-4), they were looking at encounters with slingle FW Condors and U-Boats, primarily. Six guns made sense for the British. For shooting at manouvering fighters, Thatch's preference for 4 guns and more bullets makes sense.