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Why 6 or 8? I guess the question is are 4 x 0.50" HMGs sufficient? I suppose going into 1941 the opposition for day bombers in the UK will be mainly fighter-bomber types, rather than bombers with heavier armour.
Also, they are replacing their cannons with 2nd or 3rd best choice. There have been many debates on this site as to the comparison between the destructive power of the 20mm Hispano vs the 0.50" Browning. Some suggest that the Hispano was 3 times as effective as the 0.50", so replacing the two 20mm would require 6 0.50"s for equivalent effectiveness.
Remembering that the first few Kittyhawk Is had 4 x 0.50", but later ones had 6 x 0.50". And the P-51 went from 4 in the -B to 6 in the -D.
I believe it was out board but in any case it went under.
Photo of the two guns installed in the wing certainly shows that TWO .50s will NOT fit in the space of one 20mm. Thank you/
Was not the original 8 .303 browning armament actually highly effective? I have watched so much old gun camera footage. The German bombers looked like they were being shredded by the high volume 7.7 rounds , so much camera footage just shows them coming apart. Also, when I see early me-109 footage firing on a spitfire, it is usually them missing completely with the slow firing low velocity drum fed early mg/ff 20 MMS. This subject has intrigued me for years. Also in this footage, it looks like the German mine shells are just bursting to little effect when they hit. I can't imagine even a modern aircraft standing up to 9,600 rounds per minute of rifle caliber ammo. Just my thought .
From what I read doing some searches (today actually)...Madsen made 20mm and 23mm guns for aircraft use. There is also the BESA 15mm. I know nothing about rates of fire or weight maybe someone has the figures.