Hi Slaterat,
>I dont believe that the Luftwaffe was at any major tactical disadvantage to the RAF. One could argue the opposite as RAF fighters were often still climbing to the fight and caught at an altitude disadvantage.
This certainly happened too. However, the problem is that we don't know how often each side had the initial advantage, so this gap in our knowledge invalidates any conclusion towards the relative effectiveness of the guns.
Another big factor is that for the RAF fighters operating over friendly territory and at the edge of the Me 109's range, it was much easier to disengage from a combat if at a disadvantage - and we don't know how many RAF aircraft were thus saved, and how many Messerschmitts could not escape from a disadvantageous position in an otherwise symmetrical situation.
So the lack of knowledge about the exact amount of the asymmetry between the RAF and the Luftwaffe fighters' combat experience simply makes a valid conclusion on the effectiveness of their armament impossible.
Better data might exist, but I'm not aware of it ... and even then, it might be contested. (If you remember the recent discussion on Bungay's Spitfire vs. Hurricane data, you know what I mean
Regards,
Henning (HoHun)
>I dont believe that the Luftwaffe was at any major tactical disadvantage to the RAF. One could argue the opposite as RAF fighters were often still climbing to the fight and caught at an altitude disadvantage.
This certainly happened too. However, the problem is that we don't know how often each side had the initial advantage, so this gap in our knowledge invalidates any conclusion towards the relative effectiveness of the guns.
Another big factor is that for the RAF fighters operating over friendly territory and at the edge of the Me 109's range, it was much easier to disengage from a combat if at a disadvantage - and we don't know how many RAF aircraft were thus saved, and how many Messerschmitts could not escape from a disadvantageous position in an otherwise symmetrical situation.
So the lack of knowledge about the exact amount of the asymmetry between the RAF and the Luftwaffe fighters' combat experience simply makes a valid conclusion on the effectiveness of their armament impossible.
Better data might exist, but I'm not aware of it ... and even then, it might be contested. (If you remember the recent discussion on Bungay's Spitfire vs. Hurricane data, you know what I mean
Regards,
Henning (HoHun)