Ad: This forum contains affiliate links to products on Amazon and eBay. More information in Terms and rules
In an interview a long time after the war, Gunther Rall commented on the quality of difference nations aircraft. When asked what he thought the best fighter weapon of the war was, his reply (I am paraphrasing here because I do not have a transcript of the interview to hand) went something like this. "If you were to pick only one type of weapon to carry the Americans probably had the best balance in the .50 cal Browning. But people who disparage the British with their .303 cal MGs are incorrect. When there are 8 or 12 of them firing, you would end up with a hole in every part of the airplane...including you."
Thanks for that explanation of the Thatch weave. I've never really read a consise explanation of it before so was always a little fuzzy on how it worked.Well, I have a lifetime score of only two conversations with combat experienced F4F pilots, but being a "fighter nerd" in my younger days, I focussed on their comments on the Tach weave. One of them had learned it "straight from the horse's mouth". Apparently in practice, they would fly not quite as loose as you described, and angle in so as to cross at about a 45° angle, giving the shooter a nice lead for a deflection shot at the victim's pursuer, followed by an immediate reversal allowing the former victim a deflection shot at any pursuers his partner may have acquired. Given the nimbleness of Japanese aircraft, this only worked if it was kept close and tight with a high weave rate, thus guaranteeing that any shooting opportunities the enemy got were in a high G turn against a maneuvering target. (Read Sakai's account of "the incredible acrobatic Grumman").
The guy who was in Thach's squadron said that the Old Man was an absolute stickler for gunnery, and would transfer a pilot out of the squadron if he couldn't make a deadly deflection shooter out of him. I believe Thach was quoted as saying "A pilot who can't hit with four guns won't shoot down any planes with eight!
Cheers,
Wes
If you feel like it, would you try plotting it out and see if you can get it to work out differently from what I think??
I long ago gave up trying to do scale plots of ACM engagements. It's a highly dynamic event and there are too many variables happening too fast to accurately depict on paper and then duplicate in the air. And if you've ever compared an airplane's estimated maneuvering performance from published statistics to what you can actually do with it in the air, you'll know what I mean.Thanks for that explanation of the Thatch weave. I've never really read a consise explanation of it before so was always a little fuzzy on how it worked.
There are a number of negative comments 're the Zero only having 60 rounds. It's worth remembering that the RAF, Luftwaffe, USAAF also started with 60rpg for their 20mm.
The Thatch Weave came about because once an enemy (who is as skilled as you are or possibly better, often outnumbers you, and in an airplane that outclasses your plane in all areas of maneuver but dive speed and roll at high speed) is in a shooting position or almost in a shooting position, there is almost nothing else that will accomplish anything. The only options you have are to start as tight a turn as you can, roll and start a turn, turn and climb, half-loop, full loop, or half-roll and dive.....
As to the effectiveness of the 20mm vs the .50 cal Browning vs the .303/7.7mm cal MGs I refer you back my post#1029 with the addition:
All(?) the major combatants in WWII initially equipped their 20mm armed aircraft with ~60-round drums. As far as I have read, although all combatants attempted to increase the ammo load, none of the combatants thought the short firing time was worthless or pitiful.
I'm pretty sure that the first P38's had 60rpg and I thought that the Japanese moved to a larger drum initially 90 then again up to 120 rounds which isn't much less than the Spit and other allied aircraft.Hello Glider,
That DOES seem a bit strange doesn't it? That thought had occurred to me as well, but I was figuring that it might have something to do with a particularly flimsy aircraft carrying the armament and unusually tough targets.
Did the P-38 Lightning actually start with only 60 rounds for its cannon? The ammunition load for wartime models was 150 rounds and it was the only USAAF fighter to carry a 20 mm. I figure the P-39 Airacobra really doesn't count because its 20 mm was a British specification and US spec aircraft would have had a 37 mm.
- Ivan.
I'm pretty sure that the first P38's had 60rpg and I thought that the Japanese moved to a larger drum initially 90 then again up to 120 rounds which isn't much less than the Spit and other allied aircraft.
Hello Glider,
I will do some checking about the P-38. I believe it started life with a 23 mm Madsen gun but no idea of the ammunition capacity.
As for the Soviet 20mm weapons, all I can say is that I think I remember reading that the early production fighter aircraft fitted with the engines based on the Hispano Suiza 12Y, (at least in the aircraft also fitted with a 20mm firing through the propeller shaft) used a 60-round drum. I do not know how authoritative the source was or how these engine/gun/magazine installations evolved over time in the Soviet air forces.
There are many details of the flight dynamics of tactical aircraft, especially in high performance maneuvering, that are not accurately depicted in board games and computer flight sim programs, especially if they've been reconstructed from historical statistics. Just too many variables.neither I nor anyone else that I know have been able to simulate it in either an air-air combat board game or in a computer flight sim, unless it was a 2x Wildcat vs 1x Zero scenario. I also once spoke with a friend who taught air-air maneuver tactics in the USN in the 1980s and 1990s, and his comment on the Thatch Weave was that "it didn't work that way"
XBe02Drvr, first see my comment immediately above.My main quibble (for lack of a better word) relative to the Thatch Weave is that neither I nor anyone else that I know have been able to simulate it in either an air-air combat board game or in a computer flight sim, unless it was a 2x Wildcat vs 1x Zero scenario. I also once spoke with a friend who taught air-air maneuver tactics in the USN in the 1980s and 1990s, and his comment on the Thatch Weave was that "it didn't work that way". At the time it was just part of a normal conversation so I did not think that much of it, but what I have learned since makes me wonder. Possibly what Ivan1GFP said in his post#1046 explains some of my questioning of popular accounts?
Agree entirely with Wozac. Both planes were actually failures for Northern Europe. Both had very poor high altitude performance. At altitude, every German plane outclassed them easily. However, large investments were made in their R&D and production facilities, so something had to be done with them. Rather than garbage them, they were re-purposed into ground attack planes. The Typhoon excelled at this and far surpassed the P-40 in this role. The Typhoon was also the only Allied plane that had the speed at low altitudes to catch the V-1 rocket and FW-190 recon planes. The P-40's were more successful in the Pacific, where they could use their superiour dive speed to utilize the swoop & climb tactics first instituted by Chenault's Flying Tigers. All US fighters had superiour dive speed performance than Japanese planes. Japanese were never able to overcome these tactics. As long as US fighters did not get enticed into a turning dogfight, which all Japanese planes excelled at, they would usually win. With most air combat in Northern Europe taking place at high altitude, the P-40 did not have the performance. It could not utilize the swoop & climb tactics against the Germans that it used against the Japanese. It was virtually worthless in the high altitude fight, as was the Typhoon. However, the Typhoon became a formidable ground attack plane, which the P-40 never did. However, the P-40 was better in the Pacific.