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"Bullet weight was 1160 grains (75 grams)and the propellant charge was 325 grains of Cordite for the W Mark I and 370 grains of nitro-cellulose for the W Mark Iz.Velocity at 90 feet was 2,900 feet per second (883m/s) at a maximum mean pressure of 22 tsi and penetration was seven out of ten shots must penetrate 27mm armour plate at 100 yards."German 15mm with steel projectile (72 g at 850 m/s) was good for 25mm or armor at 90 deg impact and at 300m. The Pz-I and -II is a fair game, while the Pz-III or IV will require an ideal hit from behind - not somthing we can count on.
Yes and no.Ro.57 was eventually rated for a 1000 kg bomb, the Hs 129 for a 7.5cm cannon - I'd say that these compact aircraft were substantial enough for 37mm artillery
Hurricane carried two 40mm guns, that were much more powerful than the 2 pdr pom-poms.
British don't know the exact armor thickness of German tanks in the 1st place. They do know that vast majority of French tanks have armor topping 40mm well before ww2, and can expect that Germans will try and match it.British knowledge of the up armoring??
It is not ideal, it is what you have and the alternatives need more work (heck the 15mm may need work for aircraft mounting)
Yes and no.
The Vickers 2pdr used in aircraft used a much longer recoil stroke than the 2pdr pom-pom. The peak recoil loads were less than a 20mm Hispano. The 2pdr Vickers delivered more total recoil but it was spread out over a longer period of time.
The Pak 7.5 cm AT gun recoiled over 1 meter in distance. Spread the recoil out so the gun didn't bounce around all over the place on it's wheels. The Tank cannon with about the same recoil only recoiled about 30-40CM (?) but you had a 20-25 ton vehicle keeping it in place. It also only a few shells per flight.
I don't know about the French 37mm, the Italian 37mm AA gun was noted for poor accuracy because it vibrated the deck mount/plates.
Not all guns are adaptable for aircraft use without a lot modification.
Simply, just build the HS123C en masse.Hs 129 was a result of specification that required a small 2-engined aircraft, powered by 'non-strategic' engines (ie. by the engines not required for the 1st line A/C), well armored, and with some meaningful firepower.
(the non-strategic engine part was flawed IMO - once you must manufacture two engines per A/C, and the total HP provided is lower than on a single 'normal' engine, while needing two propellers, two oil systems, that math falls in the water, but I digress)
Let's change the spec a bit, and apply it for other countries, too. Still a small 2-engined A/C is required, well armored, with very good firepower, preferably 1-seater, engines in question are preferred to be of non-strategic type, but without going into extremes so the AC is under-powered, IOW no need to go for 400-600 HP engines. Good guns' firepower is needed, so is the carriage of a lot of small bombs. No bomb bay is required.
Yes, some air forces don't have a thing for tactical A/C that much, let's have that changed for the purposes of this thread.
Aircraft needs to be in service by early 1940 in it's 1st version.
Simply, just build the HS123C en masse.
At a certain point you have to think outside the box to arrive at the right design.Hs 123 does not apply - topic is about 2-engined attackers.
But if you absolutely insist on 2 engines I'd say save DB601/5s from the DB606/10 project (which should have been cancelled) and instead build the Me109Z:
Would have had all the necessarily firepower and hauling capabilities to conduct ground attack missions and ability to replace the Bf110, while increasing production overall from economies of scale.
I figure the Hs 129 had the success it did because it operated on the Russian Front. If they had flown these things in Normandy, they would have been quickly and efficiently massacred. Use the biggest engines possible.Hs 129 was a result of specification that required a small 2-engined aircraft, powered by 'non-strategic' engines (ie. by the engines not required for the 1st line A/C), well armored, and with some meaningful firepower.
(the non-strategic engine part was flawed IMO - once you must manufacture two engines per A/C, and the total HP provided is lower than on a single 'normal' engine, while needing two propellers, two oil systems, that math falls in the water, but I digress)
Let's change the spec a bit, and apply it for other countries, too. Still a small 2-engined A/C is required, well armored, with very good firepower, preferably 1-seater, engines in question are preferred to be of non-strategic type, but without going into extremes so the AC is under-powered, IOW no need to go for 400-600 HP engines. Good guns' firepower is needed, so is the carriage of a lot of small bombs. No bomb bay is required.
Yes, some air forces don't have a thing for tactical A/C that much, let's have that changed for the purposes of this thread.
Aircraft needs to be in service by early 1940 in it's 1st version.
How about the tiniest aircraft possible, built around two BMW801s, and the BK7.5?
You missed the the part about how the engines were made by people who want you [edit] to die, die, die!. There were quality issues.Hs 129 was a result of specification that required a small 2-engined aircraft, powered by 'non-strategic' engines (ie. by the engines not required for the 1st line A/C), well armored, and with some meaningful firepower.
(the non-strategic engine part was flawed IMO - once you must manufacture two engines per A/C, and the total HP provided is lower than on a single 'normal' engine, while needing two propellers, two oil systems, that math falls in the water, but I digress)...
Not in 1940-41.You missed the the part about how the engines were made by people who want to die, die, die!. There were quality issues.
By 1944, the Americans and British used aircraft for ground attack that had the performance to look after themselves. The Ju87s and Hs129s were not used in the ETO in 1944 because the Germans could not assure the air superiority needed for their survival. The RAF Battles and Blenheims were massacred in 1940, so this point was becoming apparent even them.Hs 129 was a result of specification that required a small 2-engined aircraft, powered by 'non-strategic' engines (ie. by the engines not required for the 1st line A/C), well armored, and with some meaningful firepower.
(the non-strategic engine part was flawed IMO - once you must manufacture two engines per A/C, and the total HP provided is lower than on a single 'normal' engine, while needing two propellers, two oil systems, that math falls in the water, but I digress)
Let's change the spec a bit, and apply it for other countries, too. Still a small 2-engined A/C is required, well armored, with very good firepower, preferably 1-seater, engines in question are preferred to be of non-strategic type, but without going into extremes so the AC is under-powered, IOW no need to go for 400-600 HP engines. Good guns' firepower is needed, so is the carriage of a lot of small bombs. No bomb bay is required.
Yes, some air forces don't have a thing for tactical A/C that much, let's have that changed for the purposes of this thread.
Aircraft needs to be in service by early 1940 in it's 1st version.
Depends on when. The Argus engines were built in Germany by non-slave labor, but the engines were too small.You missed the the part about how the engines were made by people who want to die, die, die!. There were quality issues.
Okay, we build the single seat Baconator 400. It is powered by two BMW 132s for a total of around 1500HP. It is heavily armored. It can do 250mph, or 400kph, hence its name. Given effective support by Luftwaffe fighters in 1939/40, it will do well in the Blitzkrieg. If it is caught without escort, or it is attacked by fighters powered by 100_octane fuel, it will be shot down.
Well, it took quite a while for the RAF to figure out that fighter escort for strike or CAS aircraft meant that the fighters were actually supposed to at least catch a glimpse of the bombers during the mission. Scheduling a fighter sweep through the same area give or take 30 minutes of the scheduled bomber strike was NOT escorting the bombers.The RAF Battles and Blenheims were massacred in 1940, so this point was becoming apparent even them.