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I had not heard much about this but I was envisioning a weapon like this. Good info thanks. Was this effective? Or was it too late?The "best" bomber-killing weapons I've seen were the air-to-air bombs developed by the Japanese at the end of WWII, especially the Type 5 No 25 Mk 29 bomb, which weighed 551 lbs. and contained 102 lbs. of phosphorus incendiary material and 1,100 pellets. The attacking a/c could actually stand off from a reasonable distance (approx. 100m+) and lob the bomb at an approaching bomber formation.
I never heard of this weapon either.
Sounds pretty interesting, and I wonder if the Allies even heard of this weapon during WWII.
Would the bomb have a fuse that would ignite the bomb to blow up among the bombers? Or would it have to actually hit a bomber to explode?
Heinz Knoke and his II./JG 11 were using time fuzed bombs to drop on B-17 formations from their Bf 109G's in 1943 just a little note to add to your files.
II./JG 11 found the bomb worthless and went over to the underwing 2cm gondola weapons pod
Nice avatar Mustang Rider.[/QUO] Thanks Soundbraker same here.
I suspect that the Wasserfall AA missiles were expensive. If so then they cannot be used in signficant numbers even if the technology works well.
The Me-262 fighter and R4/M rocket are a different matter. Both were inexpensive and just starting to enter mass production during the spring of 1945. Extend the war another 6 months and the skies of Europe will become a heavy bomber graveyard.