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#21
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Subject: Instructors: is no combat better?
From: 362436 (Ron) Date: 3/9/04 9:59 AM Pacific Standard Time Message-id: Except that not much of it applies to WW II. Arthur Kramer And the corrollary of that, would be that not much of how war was fought in WW2 would apply to today either. Ron Tanker 65, C-54E (DC-4) Agreed. I am talking about what I know, those who fought later later are talking about what they knolw. Those who never fought are talking about what? Arthur Kramer 344th BG 494th BS England, France, Belgium, Holland, Germany Visit my WW II B-26 website at: http://www.coastcomp.com/artkramer |
#22
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Ok tribe members, its time to cast your vote. Who wants Art off the island
? |
#23
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![]() "Seagram" wrote in message ... Ok tribe members, its time to cast your vote. Who wants Art off the island Nice thread Art, don't let the bottom feeders troll you. Excellent signal, to all that participated. |
#24
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Subject: Instructors: is no combat better?
From: "Tarver Engineering" Date: 3/9/04 10:33 AM Pacific Standard Time Message-id: "Seagram" wrote in message ... Ok tribe members, its time to cast your vote. Who wants Art off the island Nice thread Art, don't let the bottom feeders troll you. Excellent signal, to all that participated. I made it through WW II . There is no way the bottom feeders stand a chance, especially the wannabee bottom feeders. But then again all the wannabees are bottom feeders. Arthur Kramer 344th BG 494th BS England, France, Belgium, Holland, Germany Visit my WW II B-26 website at: http://www.coastcomp.com/artkramer |
#25
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![]() "ArtKramr" wrote in message ... In conjunction with your comment about the gunner's remarks to you; if simple aerodynamics wasn't a part of every gunner's training during the war, it most surely should have been. What this gunner was telling you might have been from his training knowledge base or simply as the observed result of his personal experience. The end result would be the same for recognizing what the fighter was about to do, but the big difference would have been the advantage to gunners having this knowledge up front going into combat as opposed to finding it out through operational experience. Every gunner out there should have had at least some basic knowledge of positive and negative g as that knowledge relates to a firing pass by a fighter. Those who didn't had to learn the hard way. Gunners being taught a few simple facts about g and vectors would have saved many lives........ and as this knowledge relates to a firing pass, could have been taught in just a few minutes during training. The simple truth of it is that if the fighter rolled inverted during the pass, in order to pass over you he would have to bunt the airplane into negative g, and the odds of this happening vs going the positive g route under you would have all but been a sure bet that he would go positive under you; hence the lead would become predictable based on the odds. I should add that there were a few German fighter pilots who routinely would go negative, but never offensively, only defensively. Erich Hartmann was one of them, and he was not in the theatre. I've always wanted to ask a gunner from the period if simple aerodynamics was indeed taught in gunnery training to help with prediction lead solution, but somehow I've always forgotten to ask :-) If there are any gunners out there who can answer this, perhaps they will post. Dudley I think the answer would be no. When I went through gunnery training on the way to bomb school they didn't even teach us about that. And the first time I heard it, it is was totally new to me. I had to really see it to believe it. And when I saw it I thought, "why the hell is he coming in on his back? Crazy Krauts" Actually, going under is a practical air to air maneuver for a firing pass on specific targets executed in the scenario given, although the point through the run where the fighter rolled would be critical for him. Too early and he would be faced with holding the aircraft in pitch on the target while he fired entering his max/min range for his weapons. Firing through the rotation in roll as he entered his range parameters for guns would have produced a trajectory shift and gravity drop error you would have to see to believe, for all but the most highly skilled pilots. The pro of such a pass is the ability to maintain or even produce exit energy on the back side of the firing envelope through the run, exiting down and out maintaining maneuvering energy for a possible defensive maneuver if the run was followed through by a hostile (to him) shooter. Also, this energy could be expended in a transition to another high side run if unopposed. The cons are an almost certain off center ball through the run which would play hell with the projectile trajectories and an almost certain predictability of the exit direction for a real sharp gunner. These tactics I'm sure were almost certainly target aircraft specific , at least for the more able of the German pilots. They would have been familiar with the ideal angle offs and target aspects for the specific target type and made their runs if possible to take advantage of that data. Dudley |
#27
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![]() "ArtKramr" wrote in message ... Subject: Instructors: is no combat better? From: "Dudley Henriques" Date: 3/9/04 10:44 AM Pacific Standard Time Message-id: .net "ArtKramr" wrote in message ... In conjunction with your comment about the gunner's remarks to you; if simple aerodynamics wasn't a part of every gunner's training during the war, it most surely should have been. What this gunner was telling you might have been from his training knowledge base or simply as the observed result of his personal experience. The end result would be the same for recognizing what the fighter was about to do, but the big difference would have been the advantage to gunners having this knowledge up front going into combat as opposed to finding it out through operational experience. Every gunner out there should have had at least some basic knowledge of positive and negative g as that knowledge relates to a firing pass by a fighter. Those who didn't had to learn the hard way. Gunners being taught a few simple facts about g and vectors would have saved many lives........ and as this knowledge relates to a firing pass, could have been taught in just a few minutes during training. The simple truth of it is that if the fighter rolled inverted during the pass, in order to pass over you he would have to bunt the airplane into negative g, and the odds of this happening vs going the positive g route under you would have all but been a sure bet that he would go positive under you; hence the lead would become predictable based on the odds. I should add that there were a few German fighter pilots who routinely would go negative, but never offensively, only defensively. Erich Hartmann was one of them, and he was not in the theatre. I've always wanted to ask a gunner from the period if simple aerodynamics was indeed taught in gunnery training to help with prediction lead solution, but somehow I've always forgotten to ask :-) If there are any gunners out there who can answer this, perhaps they will post. Dudley I think the answer would be no. When I went through gunnery training on the way to bomb school they didn't even teach us about that. And the first time I heard it, it is was totally new to me. I had to really see it to believe it. And when I saw it I thought, "why the hell is he coming in on his back? Crazy Krauts" Actually, going under is a practical air to air maneuver for a firing pass on specific targets executed in the scenario given, although the point through the run where the fighter rolled would be critical for him. Too early and he would be faced with holding the aircraft in pitch on the target while he fired entering his max/min range for his weapons. Firing through the rotation in roll as he entered his range parameters for guns would have produced a trajectory shift and gravity drop error you would have to see to believe, for all but the most highly skilled pilots. The pro of such a pass is the ability to maintain or even produce exit energy on the back side of the firing envelope through the run, exiting down and out maintaining maneuvering energy for a possible defensive maneuver if the run was followed through by a hostile (to him) shooter. Also, this energy could be expended in a transition to another high side run if unopposed. The cons are an almost certain off center ball through the run which would play hell with the projectile trajectories and an almost certain predictability of the exit direction for a real sharp gunner. These tactics I'm sure were almost certainly target aircraft specific , at least for the more able of the German pilots. They would have been familiar with the ideal angle offs and target aspects for the specific target type and made their runs if possible to take advantage of that data. Dudley Great stuff as usual Dudley. But even though I was forewarned I was still surprised to see them come in on their backs. BTW, we could tell an experienced pilot from a novice just by how aggressive and fast he got set and swept in on us. The timorous would never come in inverted and always pass over us as he completed his run while Bill Henderson (Pittsburgh) in the top turret would track him coming an going. Of course passing under us was the better way to go since the top turret had a far greater field of action than the hand held waist guns fired by Bo Taylor (Texas). while on his knees. Lousy position. Clumsy way to shoot. worst gun on the Marauder. One thing's for sure. Everybody learned fast or they didn't learn at all. D |
#28
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Except that not much of it applies to WW II.
I've been biting my tongue for a long, long time now, but I feel that this is perhaps the right time to finally post a reply to Art Kramer. My grandfather was a pilot in the RCAF since the 1920's. He flew everything from Camels to Spitfires to even co-piloting a BUFF (yup, it's in his log book!). He was a good enough pilot to gain recognition from Billy Bishop with regards to his flying (have a great photo of the two of them together). He ended up being a wing commander before he retired, shortly after which he had a fatal heart-attack. I never had the chance to meet him. During W.W.II, he didn't see a lick of action because he was in such demand as a flight instructor. You might think he was a coward for doing so, but from his bush-piloting days, I am quite certain that he did not suffer from a lack of courage (probably the opposite!). To get to the point of this thread, training pilots (for W.W.II), one of our more treasured family possessions are the *stacks* of letters he has from the RCAF and RAF pilots that he trained, and their crediting their survival in the skies over Europe to his training. My uncle was briefly in the RCAF and has verified some of these stories personally (my grandfather never bragged or even spoke much about his work). I can also tell you that he had the complete respect of every single person who wrote him a letter, as well as numerous other veterans who simply knew him as an excellent pilot and serviceman. So while I can't give you much proof about whether combat instructors are better than non-combat instructor, I can offer you proof that many pilots thought at least one non-combat instructor was (to quote one letter) "worth [his] weight in gold". Regards, Tony Volk |
#29
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In article ,
(ArtKramr) wrote: Subject: Instructors: is no combat better? From: Howard Berkowitz Date: 3/9/04 9:47 AM Pacific Standard Time Message-id: I don't disagree with you in that exception. Where I disagree is when you appear to make accusations of cowardice or shirking against people that were not in WWII, and thus operated in different, valid environments. What do you mean "appear" to make them. You mean I don't make them but only "appear" to make them? And who have I ever called a coward? Believe me, I am no raving Bush supporter, but you seem to have suggested he avoided combat by qualifying in an aircraft with no mission in Viet Nam -- but with a mission in continental defense. You've criticized Rumsfeld for somehow not getting into combat. Again, he was qualified in a platform that could have been critical if the Cold War turned hot. |
#30
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