MIflyer
Captain
I think that we have all heard the old untrue story about the 37 MM in the P-39 being used by the Soviets to bust tanks, but in the book "Turning the Tide" about the USAAF in the Med, another related mistake is mentioned.
After they Kasserine Pass debacle the USAAF and RAF decided they'd better get their act together in the theater and, among numerous other changes, issued a directive that P-39's would no longer be used for tank busting. Henceforth the P-39 used for ground attacks would only be for strafing troops and soft-sided vehicles.
I guess that not everybody saw the memo that someone should have produced on that subject. When the RAF first came up with the Hurricane IID. equipped with two 40MM cannon for tank busting, the USAAF bragged that the 37MM in the P-39 could do the job. But the RAF did testing using an actual captured German tank and found that the 37MM in the P-39 could not penetrate German armor. The 37MM in the P-39 was not even the equivalent of the 37MM used in the Stuart tank. It was designed only for air-to air use and had not nearly the required velocity to punch through armor.
One P-39 pilot in the Med said that the 37MM did a nice job of clearing the decks of barges, but nobody talked about the round penetrating significant armor.
After they Kasserine Pass debacle the USAAF and RAF decided they'd better get their act together in the theater and, among numerous other changes, issued a directive that P-39's would no longer be used for tank busting. Henceforth the P-39 used for ground attacks would only be for strafing troops and soft-sided vehicles.
I guess that not everybody saw the memo that someone should have produced on that subject. When the RAF first came up with the Hurricane IID. equipped with two 40MM cannon for tank busting, the USAAF bragged that the 37MM in the P-39 could do the job. But the RAF did testing using an actual captured German tank and found that the 37MM in the P-39 could not penetrate German armor. The 37MM in the P-39 was not even the equivalent of the 37MM used in the Stuart tank. It was designed only for air-to air use and had not nearly the required velocity to punch through armor.
One P-39 pilot in the Med said that the 37MM did a nice job of clearing the decks of barges, but nobody talked about the round penetrating significant armor.