ORIGINAL: Yaab
and http://aupress.maxwell.af.mil/digital/p ... ir_own.pdf (recommended anyway!)
Jaroen, amazing stuff!
Yep, everyone following this thread should read this. Very well written and answers a lot of questions.
Moderators: wdolson, MOD_War-in-the-Pacific-Admirals-Edition
ORIGINAL: Yaab
and http://aupress.maxwell.af.mil/digital/p ... ir_own.pdf (recommended anyway!)
Jaroen, amazing stuff!
ORIGINAL: oldman45
ORIGINAL: Apollo11
ORIGINAL: oldman45
Your right Erkki, there are few places the plane could be hit without something being damaged, the trick is hitting it. With 12 to 14 mg's blazing away at the unprotected gun crews it had to be a pretty scary place to be.
Mynok, I am not aware of any B-25's attacking Atlanta class CL's. My comments were Allied bombers hitting Japanese ships.
But isn't the biggest problem for boresight armed bomber the fact that it can't aim the guns until the actual staffing / bombing run moment whilst the gun crews on ships had all the time to train their guns against incoming bomber? [;)]
To answer your question, pilot had a simple aiming device and he would just aim the bow of the plane at the ship and physics did the rest. I don't know how many yards in front of the plane they were bored sighted to but when they made their first run, I know they tried to make it fore and aft so they could kill the gun crews and smash the bridge.

ORIGINAL: Jaroen
@sandman455: class dismissed! [;)]
I just love source material!
ORIGINAL: sandman455
...For instance:
He references the Admiral Scheer's attack by 2E's on the first day of the war as the first "decisive use" of skip bombing tactics. Here are the "decisive" results:
First 5 Blenheims attack an unalerted German CA Scheer - 1 aircraft shot down, 3 hits but all bombs failed to arm. Yes, its hard to miss when you are that low. Just ask a Uboat crew. Second group of five aircraft moments later (AA crews were ready) - 4 of 5 Blenheim's were shot down. No hits.
Scheer was undamaged and it was stationary. 50% loss rate of aircraft on a totally surprised vessel on the very first day of the war. "Decisive" was the word he used. I'm detecting a little bias here.
ORIGINAL: FatR
Answering to the OP (not sure if this is already said in the thread): there is about one confirmed example of Japanese successfully using masthead-level bombing - the sinking of USS Twiggs (often incorrectly attributed to a torpedo attack). In general, skip/masthead bombing made little sense to Japanese. It is a cheaper equivalent of torpedo bombing, more effective and economical against small (harder to hit with a torpedo) and weakly armed targets, less effective against warships, which both have a higher chance of shooting the attacker's down and often need more damage than a single bomb does (strafing had no real chance of seriously damaging anything bigger than a patrol boat, it served primarily to suppress flak). It carries the same inherent problem of vulnerability to flak as torpedo attacks. It was mostly adopted by USAAF in SWPac because it had neither torpedo bombers nor dive bombers available. Neither it was exceptionally successful, even against super weak (until late 1943) Japanese shipboard flak - USN and USMC squadrons using traditional divebombing and torpedo bombing + shallow dive attacks by fighter bombers later in the war, achieved superior results. So, there was little reason for Japanese to adopt this attack method, particularly as they faced very heavy AAA, except for relative simplicity of this attack method. But shallow dive attacks were equally simple, so that's why they were used by Japanese later in the war instead (for example, that's how fighter-bomber Zeros were supposed to attack).
ORIGINAL: Yaab
Thanks, FatR. This answers my original question. Were fighter-bomber Zeros any good in the Pacific? Did they succesfully bomb ships using the shallow dive technique you mentioned?
ORIGINAL: Apollo11
Hi all,
ORIGINAL: oldman45
ORIGINAL: Apollo11
But isn't the biggest problem for boresight armed bomber the fact that it can't aim the guns until the actual staffing / bombing run moment whilst the gun crews on ships had all the time to train their guns against incoming bomber? [;)]
To answer your question, pilot had a simple aiming device and he would just aim the bow of the plane at the ship and physics did the rest. I don't know how many yards in front of the plane they were bored sighted to but when they made their first run, I know they tried to make it fore and aft so they could kill the gun crews and smash the bridge.
I think we misunderstood... [;)]
What I was trying to say was that whilst approaching low and slow the bombers could not fire on targeted ship because the were flying level - only very near target they could aim at targeted ship itself!
The AA on ship, meanwhile, had all that time to target the approaching bomber!
Leo "Apollo11"
Useful for learning about techniques and tactics, combat operations description is generally worthless, if you already knew about the main milestones of 5th AF's career.ORIGINAL: Yaab
and http://aupress.maxwell.af.mil/digital/p ... ir_own.pdf (recommended anyway!)
Jaroen, amazing stuff!
ORIGINAL: Nikademus
ORIGINAL: Jaroen
I just love source material!
I just love google search warriors. Try reading your links. The Scheer port attack was a low alt attack. Not skip bombing. See Shores "Fledgling Eagles" for details of the attack.
ORIGINAL: Sredni
I must say, after reading a bunch of the stuff from this thread I find myself more impressed by how integral strafing was to attack bomber type stuff. Emphasizes more and more how gimped things are by making us train up strafing in fighters separately and then moving those pilots to bombers to train low bombing. And having lowN and lowG separate skills also seems off, from the reading I did the training for either, and how they worked were very similar.
It takes a looong time to train up an attack bomber pilot to acceptable levels in straf, lowN, and lowG (plus a lot of finicky pilot management), and those pilots in turn get shot down in droves ingame.
The hit on South Dakota in Philippine Sea (often attributed to a Judy divebomber, there were no Judies in Ozawa's first wave, only 45 A6M2 modified as fighter bombers and some Jills, which, AFAIK, served as formation leaders, rather than torpedo bombers). Ki-43 fighterbombers wrecked British DD Pathfinder. It is still not totally clear whether the aircraft that bombed Franklin was D4Y or P1Y, but if the latter, it most likely attacked from a shallow dive (P1Y was not capable of steep dives). Can't tell about possible hits on transports and landing ships.ORIGINAL: Yaab
Thanks, FatR. This answers my original question. Were fighter-bomber Zeros any good in the Pacific? Did they succesfully bomb ships using the shallow dive technique you mentioned?
ORIGINAL: witpqs
In the Betas you can train bomber pilots in strafing: 100', ground attack training.
ORIGINAL: witpqs
ORIGINAL: Sredni
I must say, after reading a bunch of the stuff from this thread I find myself more impressed by how integral strafing was to attack bomber type stuff. Emphasizes more and more how gimped things are by making us train up strafing in fighters separately and then moving those pilots to bombers to train low bombing. And having lowN and lowG separate skills also seems off, from the reading I did the training for either, and how they worked were very similar.
It takes a looong time to train up an attack bomber pilot to acceptable levels in straf, lowN, and lowG (plus a lot of finicky pilot management), and those pilots in turn get shot down in droves ingame.
In the Betas you can train bomber pilots in strafing: 100', ground attack training.
ORIGINAL: sandman455
I will try to get through all your sources but I'm still on Matthew Rodman's book which I thought to be the best by far.
"After all, a single lumbering B17 just a few hundred feet above the water made an easy target for antiaircraft fire."
Can't argue with that at all. [;)]
ORIGINAL: crsutton
ORIGINAL: witpqs
ORIGINAL: Sredni
I must say, after reading a bunch of the stuff from this thread I find myself more impressed by how integral strafing was to attack bomber type stuff. Emphasizes more and more how gimped things are by making us train up strafing in fighters separately and then moving those pilots to bombers to train low bombing. And having lowN and lowG separate skills also seems off, from the reading I did the training for either, and how they worked were very similar.
It takes a looong time to train up an attack bomber pilot to acceptable levels in straf, lowN, and lowG (plus a lot of finicky pilot management), and those pilots in turn get shot down in droves ingame.
In the Betas you can train bomber pilots in strafing: 100', ground attack training.
Not a beta feataure, always have been able to. 100 feet, airfield, ground or naval will train up straffing in Attack bombers, fighters and possibly any bomber but I can't recall.