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Good God man, you're right...I'm doing about three things at once here, and was going to post that the Poles in the late 30's had some serious armored trains!I believe the Poles also had one that they put to good use during the Invasion by Germany.
This was, I believe
compounded by Stalin's insistence that all ordnance be fired in anger. This invariably resulted in coming round for that suicidal second pass and straight into a ready and waiting flak barrage that had you ranged.
The Il-2 was not in any way immune to German flak.
Armoured train - Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaDoesn't matter, I can still find wartime publications that say the Curtiss could do 400mph.
Point is the wartime publications, Newsreels and moves for the folks at home weren't any more reliable then than they are now.
SO I am really questioning the armourded trains/locomotives not which plane was shooting them.
I don't quite get the arithmetic behind your logicEvery locomotive armoured against air attack in the last the 2 years of the war means one or two less German armoured cars or halftracks manufactured maybe even three or four.
That sure would have made things a lot easier for the Allies.
I don't quite get the arithmetic behind your logic
it might have put a dent in production numbers but more heavily armoured trains would have been more survivable; hence more of the historically destroyed payloads would have gotten through
A plane whose losses to 'other means' competed quite briskly with losses to combat ops, to the point in 1944 where losses to other means outstripped combat losses by more than half.
Remind me, why is this a 'Soviet aircraft the west coulda/shoulda used?'
1. Comparing apples with oranges, surely?1. Have you got numbers for the P-51, the B-17, the P-47?
2. About 35 000 Il-2 produced 23 000 lost (12 000 in combat) , 12 000 remainding in service, that mean inevitably a 100% complete accountancy balance, and ordinary wear an tear losses comprised in the loss list.
3. I think you have confused book-keeping losses and accidental losses...
P-47 and Il-2 are like comparing boats with cars by saying they're both transports
I am not saying there were NO armoured trains. there certainly were . .
Armour costs money, much more than regular steel.
Armour is almost always in short supply in war time.
a single ton of armour would be almost worthless on a locomotive.
20lbs per sq ft for 1/2in steel (armour or soft steel) (12.7mm) or 100sq ft to the ton.
How big are these locomotives? even if you don't armour the lower 3-4 feet you need 200-300sq ft or more.
Steam locomotives need maintence and inspections, armour shrouds would make this difficult and reduce availibity of locomotives.
If you really believe war time propaganda films I can find books printed in WW II that say Curtiss P-40 Warhawks could do 400mph.
J'm not comparing anything, for the moment i'm just looking for statistics.1. Comparing apples with oranges, surely?
Stalin has nothing to do with this. She standard soviet Il2 tactic was at least 3-4 passes on the target; one with bombs, one with rockets, the others for the straffing and the last one for the camera for fixing the results. With unsatisfactory results, a secund wave of Il2 was launched. If not, a third one and so on, until the moment when ground forces were estimating that ennemy was weakened enough.This was, I believe
compounded by Stalin's insistence that all ordnance be fired in anger. This invariably resulted in coming round for that suicidal second pass and straight into a ready and waiting flak barrage that had you ranged.
The Il-2 was not in any way immune to German flak.
2. Three cheers for your 100% accountancy balance, nice to know that of 23,000 planes lost, 11,000 of them weren't to enemy action. Very reassuring.
Is that not what you bascially stated in your post 284????
A bit of a side note, but perhaps interesting to some. The Germans had a few Kampf-units specialized in "train busting" (the so called 'Eis'-units). What's surprising is that they used Ju 88C Zerstörers armed with light MGs for the job! No cannons, no bombs.
Also the American fighters were very succesful in train busting, and you know what armament they had.
Kris