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![]() I'm aware that B-17s attacked Japanese Shipping during WW2 (battle of Midway comes to mind), but that they were way too high and didn't hit anything. Speaking hypothetically, would it have radically improved anthing if the B-17 attacked from a much lower altitude? I'm thinking that the B-17 was a pretty tough plane, as proven over bombing raids in Europe. And wonder if it could survive the AA and CAP that the Japanese put up that so easily downed the Vindicators? Speed and multiple engines come to mind. Still, would bombing accuracy have improved to a point that hitting a Japanses CV would have been possible. I have this (crazy?) picture of a B-17 lining up with a Japanese carrier (lengthwise) and dropping a stick of bombs on it. Wonder what the spread would be at different speeds and the intervals between bombs. Thanks, to the SBDs, this was not needed, but just curious. Come to think of it, the Carriers would and did perform evasive movements, so skip that requirement that the B-17 would line up with the keel of the carriers. |
#3
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![]() wrote in message oups.com... I'm aware that B-17s attacked Japanese Shipping during WW2 (battle of Midway comes to mind), but that they were way too high and didn't hit anything. Speaking hypothetically, would it have radically improved anthing if the B-17 attacked from a much lower altitude? Only if the crews were trained appropriately I'm thinking that the B-17 was a pretty tough plane, as proven over bombing raids in Europe. And wonder if it could survive the AA and CAP that the Japanese put up that so easily downed the Vindicators? Speed and multiple engines come to mind. Get down low and you are much more vulnerable to flak Still, would bombing accuracy have improved to a point that hitting a Japanses CV would have been possible. I have this (crazy?) picture of a B-17 lining up with a Japanese carrier (lengthwise) and dropping a stick of bombs on it. Wonder what the spread would be at different speeds and the intervals between bombs. Thanks, to the SBDs, this was not needed, but just curious. I suspect the Nordern bombsight wasnt well suited to hitting moving targets. RAF coastal command and the Fleet Air Arm used a special version of the Course-setting Bomb Sight (the Mark IXC) which had ground speed bars calibrated in knots and were optimised for lower altitude work. Come to think of it, the Carriers would and did perform evasive movements, so skip that requirement that the B-17 would line up with the keel of the carriers. A better approach was normally to drop the stick at a relatively shallow angle to the ships course so that at least one bomb would hit the target. The Lancaster bomber was designed to be able to attack in a 30 degree dive and had a bomb bay large enough to take aerial torpedoes although I dont think were ever actually carried. Keith |
#4
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"Keith W" wrote:
snip The Lancaster bomber was designed to be able to attack in a 30 degree dive and had a bomb bay large enough to take aerial torpedoes although I dont think were ever actually carried. Keith Perhaps not in anger but they certainly were carried in practice runs and in peacetime...we used to drop them (unarmed) from Lancasters on submarines for ASW practice in the fifties...(mk 43's?). we also dropped live mk54 depth charges from Lancasters on smoke markers in the same timeframe... Jeeez, those suckers put up one big geyser of water I'll tell you...we'd drop one (from about 100 ft) then climb rapidly and wheel around and watch the entry point near the smoke marker target...all'd be quiet for a few seconds except for the smoke and a small white splash point where the charge went in...then, suddenly a big area of white water would appear, maybe 3-400 feet across and seconds later a humongous waterspout of solid black water would shoot straight up from the centre of the white area maybe 100 feet high... Spec..frickin..tacular!!..WooHoo!!. -- -Gord. (use gordon in email) |
#5
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In the ETO highlevel bombers occasionally hit ships in harbor. But at
sea the bloody things insist on evading once they see the bombs come out of the bomb bay. BTW wouldn't an artificial wind input to the Norden bombsight compensate for ship travel? I know you treat target motion the same as wind in dive bombing and strafe. However, during the Bismarck Sea episode low-level skip bombing was murderous in every sense of the word. There were plenty of medium bombers - mostly B25s with up to 8 50-cal in the nose for SEAD so the heavies weren't needed. BTW there is a late book out on the Bismarck Sea Battle (q.v.) so root it out of your local library - very good read. Walt BJ |
#6
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wrote:
On 5 Oct 2005 12:18:58 -0700, wrote: I'm aware that B-17s attacked Japanese Shipping during WW2 (battle of Midway comes to mind), but that they were way too high and didn't hit anything. Targets moving at 25+ kts. are difficult to hit. Speaking hypothetically, would it have radically improved anthing if the B-17 attacked from a much lower altitude? Yes. A lesser time of fall, certainly. There were, apparantly some extreme examples. I've hears stories of B-17s making night skip-bombing raids on Rabaul Harbor. I'm thinking that the B-17 was a pretty tough plane, as proven over bombing raids in Europe. And wonder if it could survive the AA and CAP that the Japanese put up that so easily downed the Vindicators? Speed and multiple engines come to mind. So do 8th AF losses over Europe to flak and fighters. It's a big target, and a head-on run at a ship is a zero deflection shot by its AA gunners. Of course if the ships are inadequately protected or you can overwhelm the defenses then you might be able to reprise the fate of HMS PRINCE OF WALES and REPULSE. Most of the damage to Repulse and Prince of Wales was by torpedoes, IIRC. Still, would bombing accuracy have improved to a point that hitting a Japanses CV would have been possible. Yes, if you were willing to take the casualties. I have this (crazy?) picture of a B-17 lining up with a Japanese carrier (lengthwise) and dropping a stick of bombs on it. Wonder what the spread would be at different speeds and the intervals between bombs. Thanks, to the SBDs, this was not needed, but just curious. In horizontal bombing of a moving target you aim your bombs where the target will be, not where it is. (Query: could the Norden bombsight factor in target speed, or was it designed to only engage stationary targets?) The captain of the target is watching the bomber and can see the release. The ship is also manuevering to deny the bombadier that nice target line that you desire! The Norden worked by tracking the target - the Bombardier put the crosshairs on the target, and started tracking it manually (Twist knobs to keep the crosshairs on target) When the sight was properly tracking, it would keep the crosshairs on target by itself. When the appropriate release point was reached, as determined by the airplane's altitude, speed, attitude, (You could be climbing or gliding with a Norden, within certain limits) the ambient conditions, and the bomb's ballistic characteristics as dialed into the sight, it would automatically release the bombs. There was a minimum altitude, which was driven by how fast the sights tracking motors could drive the crosshairs. So - since you weren't squinting at a spot on the ground, but tracking the target relative to the bomber, it would compute for a moving target. The Norden was developed by the Navy, y'know. I think they had ships in mind. Every Torpedo Bomber could carry one, for use in their level bombing role (Which they rarely did), and every Patrol Bomber carried one. The drawbacks are that if the ship jinks, it screws up the tracking solution, and you've got to re-synchronize and let the sight settle. Terminal velocity of the bomb is about 800 ft./sec. (per naca.larc.nasa.gov/digidoc/report/tr/79/NACA-TR-79.PDF ). So for every 5000 feet of altitude the bomb has to travel the ship's captain has about 6.25 sec. to get out of the way. Actually, he has a bit more because the bomb has to fall some distance to achieve terminal velocity. Then there's aircraft drift, wind, sea state, etc. to consider. Not a simple problem, eh? :-) That speed depends on the bomb. It's about right for a GP bomb shape, but an Armor Piercing Bomb would fall faster. But you're right - that bomb's falling a long time. It doesn't take much to make it miss. Come to think of it, the Carriers would and did perform evasive movements, so skip that requirement that the B-17 would line up with the keel of the carriers. Ayup. :-) Who was pretty good glide bombing in a Stoof using "Kentucky Windage"! The other options are skip bombing (A low fast approach, dropping the bombs well short, and having them skip off the water into the ship's side down near the waterline. The problems are that you've got to fly straight at the target, giving his now highly motivated AA gunners an easy no-lead shot, and the fact that you and the bomb will be arriving at the ship at the same time. You can get hot with the bomb, or, if it fuzes early, it blows up underneath you. The other option is torpedoes. Army Medium Bombers - the early B-25 and B-26 in particular, could carry torps. The only problem, (Other than the alien notion that the Army would drop torpedoes) was that those airplanes really didn't like to slow down to the roughly 90 Kt airspeed that was necessary to keep the torpedo from breaking up. -- Pete Stickney Java Man knew nothing about coffee. |
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#8
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![]() "Gord Beaman" wrote in message ... "Keith W" wrote: snip The Lancaster bomber was designed to be able to attack in a 30 degree dive and had a bomb bay large enough to take aerial torpedoes although I dont think were ever actually carried. Keith Perhaps not in anger but they certainly were carried in practice runs and in peacetime...we used to drop them (unarmed) from Lancasters on submarines for ASW practice in the fifties...(mk 43's?). we also dropped live mk54 depth charges from Lancasters on smoke markers in the same timeframe... Thanks Gord I forgot that the Canadians used them for ASW. The original spec issued by the Air Ministry envisage them being used against surface ships. Imagine doing a torpedo run against the Bismarck in a Lancaster ! Jeeez, those suckers put up one big geyser of water I'll tell you...we'd drop one (from about 100 ft) then climb rapidly and wheel around and watch the entry point near the smoke marker target...all'd be quiet for a few seconds except for the smoke and a small white splash point where the charge went in...then, suddenly a big area of white water would appear, maybe 3-400 feet across and seconds later a humongous waterspout of solid black water would shoot straight up from the centre of the white area maybe 100 feet high... Spec..frickin..tacular!!..WooHoo!!. Sounds fun ![]() Keith ----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeeds.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 120,000+ Newsgroups ----= East and West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =---- |
#9
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On Thu, 06 Oct 2005 00:56:43 -0400, Peter Stickney
wrote: snipped for brevity here and there Of course if the ships are inadequately protected or you can overwhelm the defenses then you might be able to reprise the fate of HMS PRINCE OF WALES and REPULSE. Most of the damage to Repulse and Prince of Wales was by torpedoes, IIRC. You might be right. Of course, the torpedo bombers at Midway suffered massive casualties because the targets were well protected by fighters and motivated AA crews. If you can split the defense using a "HI-LO" sort of attack (which was the tactic, IIRC) then your torpedo aircraft might fare better. The Norden worked by tracking the target - the Bombardier put the crosshairs on the target, and started tracking it manually (Twist knobs to keep the crosshairs on target) When the sight was properly tracking, it would keep the crosshairs on target by itself. When the appropriate release point was reached, as determined by the airplane's altitude, speed, attitude, (You could be climbing or gliding with a Norden, within certain limits) the ambient conditions, and the bomb's ballistic characteristics as dialed into the sight, it would automatically release the bombs. There was a minimum altitude, which was driven by how fast the sights tracking motors could drive the crosshairs. So - since you weren't squinting at a spot on the ground, but tracking the target relative to the bomber, it would compute for a moving target. The Norden was developed by the Navy, y'know. I think they had ships in mind. Every Torpedo Bomber could carry one, for use in their level bombing role (Which they rarely did), and every Patrol Bomber carried one. The drawbacks are that if the ship jinks, it screws up the tracking solution, and you've got to re-synchronize and let the sight settle. Thanks for info on the Norden. I was not aware of its roots. Terminal velocity of the bomb is about 800 ft./sec. (per naca.larc.nasa.gov/digidoc/report/tr/79/NACA-TR-79.PDF ). So for every 5000 feet of altitude the bomb has to travel the ship's captain has about 6.25 sec. to get out of the way. Actually, he has a bit more because the bomb has to fall some distance to achieve terminal velocity. Then there's aircraft drift, wind, sea state, etc. to consider. Not a simple problem, eh? :-) That speed depends on the bomb. It's about right for a GP bomb shape, but an Armor Piercing Bomb would fall faster. But you're right - that bomb's falling a long time. It doesn't take much to make it miss. IIRC an AP has to hit a solid target to detonate. A GP bomb would often detonate at water entry, or could be fitted with a shallow depth fuse (I don't know if an AP bomb could be similarly fitted). While a hit is better than a miss, a near miss by a large GP bomb can still cause significant damage to a ship by weakening or opening seams. Multiple near misses can be fatal. Come to think of it, the Carriers would and did perform evasive movements, so skip that requirement that the B-17 would line up with the keel of the carriers. Ayup. :-) Who was pretty good glide bombing in a Stoof using "Kentucky Windage"! The other options are skip bombing (A low fast approach, dropping the bombs well short, and having them skip off the water into the ship's side down near the waterline. The problems are that you've got to fly straight at the target, giving his now highly motivated AA gunners an easy no-lead shot, and the fact that you and the bomb will be arriving at the ship at the same time. You can get hot with the bomb, or, if it fuzes early, it blows up underneath you. Skip bombing was widely used against merchant targets, but it's more problematical against a warship due to the volume of AA fire the crew faces. I see it as VERY costly against a high value military target surrounded by a screen of escorts in an AA formation. The other option is torpedoes. Army Medium Bombers - the early B-25 and B-26 in particular, could carry torps. The only problem, (Other than the alien notion that the Army would drop torpedoes) was that those airplanes really didn't like to slow down to the roughly 90 Kt airspeed that was necessary to keep the torpedo from breaking up. Skip bombing and torpedo attacks have the same difficulty: you have to get in close to the target, slow and at low altititude. Against merchant ships this is a doable thing. Against a properly protected high value target you will loose a LOT of aircraft (a la Midway). Bill Kambic |
#10
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