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Or the B-25 crashing into the Jap forces at the end of the Dolittle Raid within feet of the other downed airmen. That was a "guffawer".
Yeah man, like that. Also in the movie Ben Affleck survives when his spitfire hits the water. If that was real, wouldn't the aircraft had shattered in pieces and Affelck would be on the bottom on the channel?
In replay to Vassili Zaitzev: Lt's Ken Taylor and George Welch are credited with between 6 and 10 (depending on reports cited and including "Probables") Japanese aircraft shot down between them, mostly Aichi B3A1 dive bombers, though at least one A6M2 was claimed as well. As for Afflack saying the P-40 couldn't outrun a Zero, true, above about 15,000 feet, but below that, it was faster and could out-dive a Zero any day. In all, 5 USAAF pilots scored victories that day for a total of 10 confirmed, 4 probable and 2 damaged. In a side note Welch went on to fly Airacobras and Lightnings in the SW Pacific and was sent home with malaria after 16 confirmed victories in late fall 1943. After the war as a civilian test pilot for the XF-86, he managed to exceed the speed of sound in a dive just days before Yeager did it in level flight in the X-1. Welch died 25 May 1953 when the F-100A he was test flying broke up.
Sometimes I wish Ben Afflick would disappear under the water.
Ahhhhh.........no.Okay, but still in that sort of thing, they have already been identified as enemies so you shoot them down before they get that close. The whole idea I thought of modern combat was to get that pilot before you had to dogfight them... In that sense then, I really thought that most of the modern usefulness of a cannon on a fighter, fighter/bomber was to be able to conduct ground attack. That is what I thought the cannon was mostly turned into, a ground-attack weapon...