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Re: Best plane of WW2 on second thought I like the lightning http://www.warbirdsresourcegroup.org...ges/p38-11.jpg |
Re: Best plane of WW2 It should be noted that the Brewster Buffalo's flown in the PTO were mostly overweight and underpowered navalized versions flown by green pilots with no combat experience flying against veteran combat experienced Zero pilots. It was a shooting gallery. The British and IIRC Netherlands versions were the B339 export version wich was much lighter. They had more expereienced pilots, In the Brits case some even having flown in the Battle of Britain. The export versions fared much better but were still outclassed by the Zero. The Finnish Buffalo's, aka the Finnish "Zero's", were very highly modified from stock. Everything not related to keeping the airframe airborne was removed. The original about 900hp engine was pulled and rebuilt 1200hp Wright Cyclones were installed but moved about 4" forward to improve center of gravity. The rudder area was increased in size to compensate for the increased torque and to give better directional stability. The wing tanks were removed and fuel tanks installed in the fuselage. This lightenmed the wings and improved roll rate. Larger ailerons were installed which increased responsiveness and increased roll rate further. The wimpy 7.62mm (.30cal) guns were removed and 4 x .50cal guns were installed. IIRC all 4 guns were installed in the fuselage to keep the wings light and roll rate high. The US ring and bead gunsight was removbed and a excellent Revi reflector gunsight was installed. This modified Finnish Buffalo rolled, turned and climbed like a Zero and was even faster than a Zero and was well armed for the time with 4 x 12.7mm (.50CAL) mg's. The .50 cal was good in air to air since it had a good muzzle velocity, good rate of fire, and was very capable against the aircraft of the time. Alot of that relates to most Axis aircraft being light and manuverable. Lightweight meant they didnt absorb damage well so a .50 cal would chew up enemy aircraft pretty well. The WW2 Soviet aircraft were built on same principle as the Germans in that they were lightweight and manuverable but were more rugged. It wasnt til the US encountered MiG-15's over Korea that the .50 cal was finally too light. The MiG-15 was a very rugged strong design that the .50cal couldnt do damage to fast enough. US countered with F-86C with 4 x 20mm cannons. |
Re: Best plane of WW2 It may not be the best plane but... I certainly love the Stuka! Blitzkrieg would never become famous without our beloved Stukas. |
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Re: Best plane of WW2 Actually it wasn't a 'navalized' version. It was the original version. IIRC Brewster Aeronautical Corporation was awarded the contract over Grumman to build the Navy's first mono-wing all metal carrier borne fighter aircraft. It wasn't until they had completed a working carrier plane that it was 'de-navalized' for land based service. So what your saying is the Finns and everyone else took a sub-standard naval fighter ..... modified it heavily, put their best and most seasoned pilots in it ...and had success ....wow whoda thunk that would happen. And FYI ....Red Parks Marines were not all green boys that climbed into those death traps that fateful day in June of 42 ...some of them were highly skilled aviators who lacked only the genuine combat experience of their Japanese adversaries. And how could they have? They didn't have the luxury of a three to four year Chinese test bed to hone their skills while being shot at. But they were by no means the same lowly caliber of pilot that would be filling Japanese suicide planes in late 44 and 45. I'm just so so glad that my grandfather ended up in a Scouting squadron back then flying SB2Us and then SBDs. They were about the only American birds that weren't dropping like flies thru the early months of 42. But they sure were doing a lot of 'dropping' of their own. IMO ....if ya'll want to pinpoint one signifigant aircraft that really made the difference in the war .....it was the Douglas SBD Dauntless. |
Re: Best plane of WW2 I really like the p-51, its awsome. |
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I dont see this as being all that different than the mods that turned the Allison engined P-51A into the excellent Merlin engined P-51D. Or when Japan modified the Kawasaki Ki-61-II-KAI-KO into the Ki-100 after their supply of Ha140 engines disappeard in a B-29 raid. Quote:
And what does Japanese pilot experience in late war have to do with the comabt experience of the US pilots at Midway in 1942? It has nothing to do with it. Your throwing in irrelevant facts to detract from the reality of the US pilots inexperience. If the US had modified their Buffalo's even half as much as the Finns did would it have made a difference? with inexperienced pilots probably not. Does it mean the US pilots were poorly trained and led? No it means the pilots were going against the best the IJN had to offer and they were cut to ribbons. If experienced combat pilots had been flying the Buffalos could they have used tactics to counter the Zero? maybe keeping airspeed up to limit Zeros manuverability?, boom and zoom tactics?, Thatch weave? No one knows. |
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Ok ...go ahead and pick this one apart like you normally do and we'll just keep going round and round. |
Re: Best plane of WW2 hands down spitfire. |
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I think the Japanese Zero was the best. |
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