Low altitude 4E pix

Gary Grigsby's strategic level wargame covering the entire War in the Pacific from 1941 to 1945 or beyond.

Moderators: Joel Billings, wdolson, Don Bowen, mogami

spence
Posts: 5421
Joined: Sun Apr 20, 2003 6:56 am
Location: Vancouver, Washington

Low altitude 4E pix

Post by spence »

The USN operated its 4Es at low altitude. Just some pix.

Image
Attachments
faw1histor..6oct2004.jpg
faw1histor..6oct2004.jpg (119.29 KiB) Viewed 374 times
spence
Posts: 5421
Joined: Sun Apr 20, 2003 6:56 am
Location: Vancouver, Washington

RE: Low altitude 4E pix

Post by spence »

another

Image
Attachments
faw1histor..6oct2004.jpg
faw1histor..6oct2004.jpg (140.64 KiB) Viewed 373 times
spence
Posts: 5421
Joined: Sun Apr 20, 2003 6:56 am
Location: Vancouver, Washington

RE: Low altitude 4E pix

Post by spence »

another - says it all

Image
Attachments
vp104histo..9nov2002.jpg
vp104histo..9nov2002.jpg (6.6 KiB) Viewed 373 times
spence
Posts: 5421
Joined: Sun Apr 20, 2003 6:56 am
Location: Vancouver, Washington

RE: Low altitude 4E pix

Post by spence »

All these photos and alot of other interesting stuff to be found at VPNavy.com: squadron histories, seaplane tender histories, aircraft histories, crew histories...all kinds of stuff.
User avatar
Dixie
Posts: 10304
Joined: Fri Mar 10, 2006 3:14 pm
Location: UK

RE: Low altitude 4E pix

Post by Dixie »

Thanks, those are some nice pics. 
 
On the topic of USN bombers, am I correct in assuming that they usually flew individually?  Similar to Coastal Command and the LW Fw-200 usage?
[center]Image

Bigger boys stole my sig
spence
Posts: 5421
Joined: Sun Apr 20, 2003 6:56 am
Location: Vancouver, Washington

RE: Low altitude 4E pix

Post by spence »

From what I've read in many of the VPNavy accounts several aircraft would cooperate in making attacks on shipping. I'm not sure whether the aircraft were dispatched together or whether a/c from adjacent patrol sectors were called in or what.

In at several accounts one attacking a/c strafed the target (in the case of a Privateer that's a 10 x .50 cal broadside) while another ran in low to make a bombing attack at masthead height (the first ceased fire just as the other one arrived at the drop point).

User avatar
RUPD3658
Posts: 6921
Joined: Wed Aug 28, 2002 2:25 am
Location: East Brunswick, NJ

RE: Low altitude 4E pix

Post by RUPD3658 »

ORIGINAL: spence

another - says it all

Image

I guess there was no house rule for 4E bombers' altitude IRL[8D]
"The difference between genius and stupidity is that genius has limits"- Darwin Awards 2003

"No plan survives contact with the enemy." - Field Marshall Helmuth von Moltke
[img]https://www.matrixgames.com/forums/upfi ... EDB99F.jpg[/img]
User avatar
JeffroK
Posts: 6421
Joined: Wed Jan 26, 2005 4:05 am

RE: Low altitude 4E pix

Post by JeffroK »

IMHO, the bombs have too high accuracy & effect ratings.
 
Players shopuld be able to bomb at will, realising they were not as accurate of effective at hoped.
 
I also think "tweaking" the japanese aerial torp accuracy would be of value.
Interdum feror cupidine partium magnarum Europae vincendarum
Son of Jorg
Posts: 38
Joined: Wed Jan 18, 2006 5:36 am
Location: South Dakota

RE: Low altitude 4E pix

Post by Son of Jorg »

Well I think the house rule is there because IRL there were no 100+ 4-E air strikes targeting ships on the open sea, like there can be in WitP. No one doubts that 4-E bombers were used in low level attacks, but they were individuals on patrol or small groups as described.
User avatar
castor troy
Posts: 14331
Joined: Mon Aug 23, 2004 10:17 am
Location: Austria

RE: Low altitude 4E pix

Post by castor troy »

ORIGINAL: JeffK

IMHO, the bombs have too high accuracy & effect ratings.

Players shopuld be able to bomb at will, realising they were not as accurate of effective at hoped.

I also think "tweaking" the japanese aerial torp accuracy would be of value.


They may have a too high accuracy but for sure not a too high effect rating. They have a too low effect rating IMO. No WWII took as many bomb hits and survived as we see in the game all the time.
John Lansford
Posts: 2664
Joined: Mon Apr 29, 2002 12:40 am

RE: Low altitude 4E pix

Post by John Lansford »

Thanks for the VP link; it's very interesting.  Now I'm trying to figure out why all my PB2Y's are being converted to Lockheed Venturas (resulting in a MUCH smaller search radius)... [&:]
spence
Posts: 5421
Joined: Sun Apr 20, 2003 6:56 am
Location: Vancouver, Washington

RE: Low altitude 4E pix

Post by spence »

Thanks for the VP link; it's very interesting. Now I'm trying to figure out why all my PB2Y's are being converted to Lockheed Venturas (resulting in a MUCH smaller search radius)...

WitP shortchanged the Ventura's range by around 900 miles. IRL they were used on bombing strikes that, on the WitP map, would be around 14 hexes such as Truk from Tinian and Balikpapan from Leyte.

Another important distinction is that the 4E bombers used in the posts above were USN rather than USAAF. The pilots' training and doctrine were different. The Privateer (PB4Y-2) had a lot of specifically Navy modifications that enhanced it's ability to attack at low altitude: most notably; the superchargers were removed from the engines because the plane was NEVER going to operate at over 10000 ft. The ball turret was removed to save weight and increase range AND because the only enemy that was going to get underneath a PB4Y-2 was a submarine.
John Lansford
Posts: 2664
Joined: Mon Apr 29, 2002 12:40 am

RE: Low altitude 4E pix

Post by John Lansford »

Yeah, I've seen merchant ships absorb a dozen 500 pound bomb hits and not sink for days afterward, if then. IMO all merchant ships are too damage resistant from wherever the damage comes from; not many AK's would survive even one torpedo hit yet I see them doing that all the time.
User avatar
crsutton
Posts: 9590
Joined: Fri Dec 06, 2002 8:56 pm
Location: Maryland

RE: Low altitude 4E pix

Post by crsutton »

My wife's father flew Hudsons, Venturas and Liberators in the South Pacific as a Navy pilot.  He died a few years back but liked to talk about his flying days. He said that they only got superficial training in high altitude bombing and never really practiced it. The expectation was that they were going to be low for any bombing attack and that is pretty much the way they did it.

He told me that the only real reason to fly a Navy bomber at altitude was to ice up beer.
I am the Holy Roman Emperor and am above grammar.

Sigismund of Luxemburg
User avatar
niceguy2005
Posts: 12522
Joined: Mon Jul 04, 2005 1:53 pm
Location: Super secret hidden base

RE: Low altitude 4E pix

Post by niceguy2005 »

ORIGINAL: JeffK

IMHO, the bombs have too high accuracy & effect ratings.

Players shopuld be able to bomb at will, realising they were not as accurate of effective at hoped.

I also think "tweaking" the japanese aerial torp accuracy would be of value.
It's hard to make an apples to apples comparison, because games can't be 100% representations of RL. However, Allied anti-shipping was extremely effective by mid-war. Japanese anti-shipping was extremely from the start...they just didn't always use torps.

IMO one of the problems with the game is that for both sides LBA naval attacks are too large. I don't think there was ever a 50 plane Betty naval attack, or a 60 plane B-17 naval attack.
Image
Artwork graciously provided by Dixie
User avatar
Bombsight
Posts: 45
Joined: Mon Feb 28, 2005 9:07 am
Location: Houston, TX

RE: Low altitude 4E pix

Post by Bombsight »

There might not have been 40, 50 or 60 plane raids in an individual sense. If you look at the game as summarizing actions into one AM or PM time frame, then several raids comprising that many aircraft could conceivably have occurred.
Tactics II
spence
Posts: 5421
Joined: Sun Apr 20, 2003 6:56 am
Location: Vancouver, Washington

RE: Low altitude 4E pix

Post by spence »

IMO one of the problems with the game is that for both sides LBA naval attacks are too large. I don't think there was ever a 50 plane Betty naval attack, or a 60 plane B-17 naval attack.

IIRC the attack on Repulse and Prince of Wales involved about 80 Bettys/Nells though some made high altitude bombing attacks (with only marginally better results than Allied bombers had from altitude) rather than torpedo attacks.
User avatar
rtrapasso
Posts: 22655
Joined: Tue Sep 03, 2002 4:31 am

RE: Low altitude 4E pix

Post by rtrapasso »

ORIGINAL: spence
Thanks for the VP link; it's very interesting. Now I'm trying to figure out why all my PB2Y's are being converted to Lockheed Venturas (resulting in a MUCH smaller search radius)...

WitP shortchanged the Ventura's range by around 900 miles. IRL they were used on bombing strikes that, on the WitP map, would be around 14 hexes such as Truk from Tinian and Balikpapan from Leyte.

Another important distinction is that the 4E bombers used in the posts above were USN rather than USAAF. The pilots' training and doctrine were different. The Privateer (PB4Y-2) had a lot of specifically Navy modifications that enhanced it's ability to attack at low altitude: most notably; the superchargers were removed from the engines because the plane was NEVER going to operate at over 10000 ft. The ball turret was removed to save weight and increase range AND because the only enemy that was going to get underneath a PB4Y-2 was a submarine.
Most planes have their range rather drastically reduced to make up for operational fuel usage (circling to wait for a squadron to form up, flying around bad weather, flak concentrations, etc.) i am not sure they just used a flat percentage or what, though.
User avatar
Swayin
Posts: 331
Joined: Sat Jan 27, 2007 6:05 pm
Location: Bellingham, WA

RE: Low altitude 4E pix

Post by Swayin »

ORIGINAL: crsutton
He told me that the only real reason to fly a Navy bomber at altitude was to ice up beer.


mmm.... beer.
The Beatings Will Continue Until Morale Improves

Image
spence
Posts: 5421
Joined: Sun Apr 20, 2003 6:56 am
Location: Vancouver, Washington

RE: Low altitude 4E pix

Post by spence »

Most planes have their range rather drastically reduced to make up for operational fuel usage (circling to wait for a squadron to form up, flying around bad weather, flak concentrations, etc.) i am not sure they just used a flat percentage or what, though

Knocking off 900 miles seems a bit drastic actually. IMHO your statement would approxiamate truth only if the word "ALLIED" were inserted after "Most".
Post Reply

Return to “War In The Pacific - Struggle Against Japan 1941 - 1945”