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There were some P-51As used in the CBI theater but the quantities were low. Probably no more than 1-3 squadrons at any one time. On dec 31st 1943 it was listed that 60 P-51As total were serving in the CBI and North African Theaters.
Likewise there were two P-38 squadrons (one in India and ome in Burma?) and we can argue all week about survival rates and such but it just may be that the P-38 and Allison P-51s were being used in such small numbers as to make drawing valid conclusions from statistics rather difficult.
I mean if you only have 12 planes operational for a mission and you lose 2 you have lost 16.6%.
If you have 36 planes on a mission and lose 4 you have 11% losses.
Nobody can say if you had more of the rarer planes if they would have lost more on the same mission.
the MG 151/20 was a fearsome weapon, and certainly superior to 2 synchronized Breda-SAFAT machine guns
...and that is whatmost peopleAmericans concentrate on...
The US Navy concluded a single 20mm Hispano was equivalent to 3 M2 Brownings. The Breda-SAFAT was less effective than the M2, but the MG 151 was approximately equivalent to the Hispano. The Mauser had lower muzzle velocity, but more effective ammunition.I'm not sure that I buy a single 20mm cannon, no matter how fearsome, is superior to two 12.7mm machine guns
The US Navy concluded a single 20mm Hispano was equivalent to 3 M2 Brownings.
Its been discussed on the forum a few times. Not so much in terms of 1 cannon = 3 MGs but in terms of general armament, try a search.Do you have any other details, like in what ways were they equivalent? I would think that three .50s would spray more lead in a much larger pattern and give the pilot a far better chance of hitting his intended target.
Its been discussed on the forum a few times. Not so much in terms of 1 cannon = 3 MGs but in terms of general armament, try a search.
There's been several discussions here in the forums that covered that subject in detail, complete with opinions, theories and hard data provided by the USN and USAAF on their comparisons and test data and ultimately, why they chose to remain with the .50 MG as a primary weapon.Of course cannon armament would be preferred overall (bigger shells=bigger holes). I'm more interested in the findings of the specific US Navy report, rather than the various opinions and theories discussed here and elsewhere. I'm sure that there are a lot of reasons why the US stuck with arming most of their
fighters with heavy machine guns, rather than exclusively with cannon or a mixed battery.
The discussions frequently quote reports whether from the US navy I don't know, mostly it was a question of logistics and potential targets. The UK from early days wanted cannon armed fighters and pretty much had them, the fly in the ointment is the Spitfire which usually just had one in each wing due to problems heating the outer gun. Whirlwind, Hurricane , Mustang, Beaufighter Mosquito Typhoon and Tempest all had 4 cannon. The discussion is not just one of the hitting power of a bullet shell, it is also one of rate of fire, the 0.5in MG increased in reliability and rate of fire considerably. When the RAF were experimenting with cannon in Spitfires in 1940 the 0.5 MG was not really an option.Of course cannon armament would be preferred overall (bigger shells=bigger holes). I'm more interested in the findings of the specific US Navy report, rather than the various opinions and theories discussed here and elsewhere. I'm sure that there are a lot of reasons why the US stuck with arming most of their
fighters with heavy machine guns, rather than exclusively with cannon or a mixed battery.
I'm not sure that I buy a single 20mm cannon, no matter how fearsome, is superior to two 12.7mm machine guns - but if it is I would assume it's pretty close .
All the Allied pilots in the Med rated the MC 202 as equivalent to the Bf 109F. The MC 205 which started getting put into MC 202 units in 1942 added two MG 151/20 in the wings so that helped keep up parity.
You would be in the minority.
Granted there are different 12.7-13mm machine guns and there are different 20mm cannon.
US Navy figured one 20 Hispano gun was worth three .50 cal Brownings in 1944.
The 12.7mm Breda-Safat machine gun fired about 700rpm unsynchronized but could fall to 400rpm when synchronized according to one Author (Anthony WIlliams who's website was the source of the above photos.)
so you have about 800rpm from a pair of guns (lets be generous and 900 because it makes the math easy) firing 33-35.4 gram projectiles for 531 grams per second (using the heaviest bullets).
A P-40 Tomahawk with the cowl mounted .50s firing at the same rate is throwing about 645 grams and the 4 wing .30 guns add another 800 or so grams.
A P-40E with just 4 .50 cal guns in the wings is throwing 2150 grams per second (at 750rpm per gun, adjust as you see fit) and a 6 gun airplane is 50% greater than that.
The 109F-2 with the MG 151/15 is firing the full 700rpm (11.66 per second?) and projectiles are 57 grams for HE and 72 grams for AP, I will assume a 50/50 mix for simplicity.
753 grams per second with the pair of cowl mounted 7.9mm machine guns (1000rpm each synchronized) adding another 360 grams.
The 109F-4 with the MG 151/20 is still firing at 700rpm (or more?) but the projectiles weigh 90-115grams, so the average is 1189 grams per second plus the cowl guns.
One area where cannon were shown to be better than MGs was in taking down V1s they were very hard to shoot down without cannon.
Actually no it doesn't, it really doesn't at all. Fighter versus fighter conflicts are completely academic. For the RAF it was the ability to take down a bomber that was important and even in the quite short lived Battle of Britain this became harder and harder with rifle calibre munitions. It is immaterial what any German pilot considered the best armament for dog fighting was, the LW was tasked with taking down USA and RAF bombers. Some Spitfires had 4 cannon and 4 0.303MGs which is great firepower, but don't ask about roll rate, rate of climb etc.
You, happily have the knowledge of hindsight, the Germans never signed any undertaking to stop bombing raids. The British were facing bombing raids in Malta and elsewhere after 1940 and the Germans used bombers in anti shipping attacks. The British were not late in the conclusion that rifle calibre was inadequate that is why they wanted cannon armed fighters, the issue is what you replace the 0.303 with on a single engine fighter in 1939/40. The RAF were tasked with protecting the UK mainland which by 1944 had huge USA resources on it too, they had to be prepared for any eventuality, because no one actually knew what their strength was, with 100% certainty. The effect of a few unopposed raids on East Anglia could have been devastating.But after the BoB, the British weren't facing a lot of heavy daylight bomber formations. The main threat was from night bombers, marauding Jabos and later, V-1s and V-2s. The only large aircraft they were regularly facing were twin engine fighters or bombers made into bomber zerstrorers, or night fighters.
The main job of Anglo-American fighters was to destroy German fighters and protect their own bombers and fighter bombers so the latter could destroy Strategic and Tactical targets respectively. The main job of the Russian air force was to destroy German fighters and Stukas, and protect the Sturmovik and Pe 2 formations so they could destroy German tanks.
Rifle caliber bullets were inadequate, at least on their own, and the British were a little late to that conclusion, though once they switched to cannon they had excellent ones.
But HMG's would do in a pinch as US fighter didn't have trouble shooting down German, Italian or Japanese bombers that I know of. The most popular of the very many Spitfire weapon loadouts from what I gather ended being 2 x Hispano 20mm and 2 x Browning M2 12.7mm