Airframes
Benevolens Magister
No, they were light bombers. Heavy bombers dropped boulders .................
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Ad: This forum contains affiliate links to products on Amazon and eBay. More information in Terms and rules
I will contact him.
I'll be damned...The P-40 and P-51 had extremely short gun barrels because they were air superiority fighters.
Nice photo of the belt feed for each machine gun...
View attachment 566824
However based on that photo - I would've felt the staggered gun lengths would be reversed like this, to assist the belt feed?
(But I am drinking rather heavily tonight)
View attachment 566825
The first P-47's had 267 rpg. The later ones had 425 rpg. The P-47N had 500 rpg. The mounting of the guns as showed by fubar57 allowed the P-47 to carry more ammo than any other fighter....
"I don't care if it rains or freezes..."His first design was a plastic Jesus on the dash, but it blocked the gunsight...
is what 50 caliber gun was in the P-47 Thunderbolt - Google SearchWell, the max chord at the center is not the only reason. This is true, but the P-47 wing is thicker and also wider (front-to-back). Because the wing of the P-51 is quite a bit smaller than that of the P-47, there was no reasonable option to fully stagger the guns. As can be seen in the image below, the two outer guns are not staggered at all, and the ammo trays lie one atop the other, which is why they are limited to only 280 rpg as compared to 400 for the inner gun. The inner gun is staggered back about 1/2 the length of a round, and the ammo belt has to twist slightly back to reach the second ammo tray. This arraingment also required the guns to be set further apart than those of the P-47.
Images from Flightjournal.com - P-51 in Detail.
Perhaps someone can find a good photo (I've looked but no luck right now), but on the P-47 it was possible to stagger each gun enough that the belt could feed strait into the gun from its own ammo tray w/o any twisting of the belts. To accomplish this, 3 of the gun barrels must protrude significantly from the wing. Each gun could have up to 425 rounds of ammo (though usually less was carried).
=S=
Lunatic
Resp:Pretty close, the wing profile defined where the Breaches to the guns went. The P-47s wing was thicker further foward than a Lamininar Flow wing like the P-51.
The P-47 also had 4 guns each side instead of 3 which affected placement somewhat.
The early P-51s (Bs and Cs) had a lot of trouble because of the tight quarters in the thin wing. They finaly used feed motors from B-26s to keep the guns from jamming!