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P-47/51 deflection shots into the belly of the German tanks,reality



 
 
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  #1  
Old September 4th 03, 11:30 PM
Guy Alcala
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ArtKramr wrote:

Subject: P-47/51 deflection shots into the belly of the German
tanks,reality
From: Guy Alcala


I'll stick with the evidence that actually exists, gathered on the
ground.

Guy


Yes by ground personell (infantry, artillery) who had an agenda in down playing
the effectiveness of air attack. I can either believe you or my own lying eyes.


And the air force commanders were disinterested spectators who didn't have an
agenda in claiming increased effectiveness for air attack? While we're on the
subject of your eyes, please tell us the recognition features that distinguish
between a PzKw IV, a Marder II, a Nashorn, a Wespe, an SPW 251/1, and an SdKfz
234. Once you've done that, tell us at what range each of these features becomes
distinguishable, under combat conditions.

Given the large number of attacks by allied a/c on allied ground vehicles and
aircraft, are you seriously claiming that the average allied airman was able to
tell the difference between the various flavors of German AFVs from the air (even
assuming they knew them, which is unlikely), when they were sometimes unable to
tell the difference between say, the distinctive M4 Sherman and _any_ German
armored vehicle? This is a trivial exercise for someone who is on the ground
nearby and isn't being shot at, but rather more difficult from several hundred or
thousand yards away while having to fly and avoid being shot down or crashing into
the ground. Hell, ground combat troops were unable to make these distinctions - to
virtually any U.S. or British ground troops, every German tank was a Tiger, every
artillery piece an 88. If that had been true it certainly would have surprised
Albert Speer, as the production figures show that these types made up small
fractions of the total tank and artillery production.

Guy

  #3  
Old September 4th 03, 11:59 PM
TooPlaneCrazy7
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Hi folks,
I have been unable to get a DVD copy of this video that I uploaded, so I went
back to the VHS copy and *sharpened* it a little bit with a digital video
editor. I have now uploaded it to the Web (link below) and you can clearly see
a tiger tank (they show 3 passes). I know the first one is a Tiger Tank and I
am pretty sure the last one is, as well. Watch as the pilot strafes it...you'll
notice the tank practically "blowing up" with black smoke on the 3rd pass.

When the pilot says "we'd hit the trailer and put him on fire" you'll see a
Tiger Tank with some burning vehicle behind it (a trailer or another Tiger
Tank?).

A side note: In the last months of WWII, General Hap Arnold, head of the U.S.
Army Air Force, ordered the making of a color film on his forward strike crews,
particularly the P-47 Thunderbolts fighter groups flying close air support to
the army's infantry and armor units. From March 1 to May 8, 1945, 16 camera
crews shot 86 hours of film. But after the war, General Arnold decided not to
release the footage. We tracked down four original pilots from the 362nd
Fighter Group who narrate the story we see on the screen.

I recently spoke with the director of this HISTORY CHANNEL documentary and I
asked him about the validity of "bouncing" bullets under the Tiger Tank to hit
its "thin" belly. This is what he had to say:

"The German Tiger tanks used so much fuel they used to tow their own extra fuel
supply behind them and the pilots told me they went for the fuel trailer first
then the tank where they would bounce up the .50 cal from the road because they
could not get through the armorplate. Ken Bullock talks about this in the film,
we was a captain and won the DFC and a lot of the combat footage in the film is
from Ken's guncamera. He died a year ago, his son now works at NASA in
Washington. Other pilots in the 362nd FG told me they did it too. I was
surprised since I didn't know that either."

Whatever your conclusions are, please pay a visit to the Texas Air Museum Web
site--and if you're in Texas anytime soon, pay them a visit! Their URL is:
http://www.texasairmuseum.com

The URL to the VIDEO is he http://www.texasairmuseum.com/temp/p47bust.wmv
(it's a little over 7megs).


  #4  
Old September 5th 03, 02:30 AM
Andrew Chaplin
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TooPlaneCrazy7 wrote:

Whatever your conclusions are, please pay a visit to the Texas Air Museum Web
site--and if you're in Texas anytime soon, pay them a visit! Their URL is:
http://www.texasairmuseum.com

The URL to the VIDEO is he http://www.texasairmuseum.com/temp/p47bust.wmv
(it's a little over 7megs).


Sorry, the site wants to download a file to my machine. Unless it
takes a less risky approach to its visitors, it's off limits.
--
Andrew Chaplin
SIT MIHI GLADIUS SICUT SANCTO MARTINO
(If you're going to e-mail me, you'll have to get "yourfinger." out.)
 




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