ORIGINAL: pasternakski
The Bf.109 "shoot through the prop" design was a leftover from obsolete WWI technology that had been abandoned by just about everyone else. The cam linkage necessary to make it work introduced just another maintenance headache and caused severe engine and prop bearing wear and damage when the guns were fired. Also, the difficulties and performance limitations presented by mounting a weapon inside the prop cowling extending back into the engine machinery were never completely overcome, either. Remember that this aircraft was "state of the art" for 1926, when its primary predecessor was introduced. By the time of the Battle of Britain, even the odd English Spitfire designs were superior - as fragile and flawed as those aircraft were.
Small wonder that the Fw.190 adopted the approach to weaponry configuration favored by Allied designers.
Pasternakski, looks like we have different opinions on this subject also. I don’t think that cowl and fuselage mounted synchronized weapons were ww1 leftover and definitly weren’t obsolete. Both variants had their own pluses and minuses.
Wing mounted armament provides better rate of fire and more room for guns to mount, but wings are the most vulnerable part of aircraft for g-forces, wing-mounted guns are more likely to jam because of g-force. You can’t choose the range on which your fire should concentrate, concentration point once set up on the ground, cannot be changed in the air, on all other ranges dispersion of fire is too great. Thunderbolts, Corsairs, Hellcats all were experiencing problems with hitting something at close range when target was flying at bit different angle. Ammo boxes in wings are more vulnerable to enemy fire than those in fuselage, thus they should have more serious armor, which increase weight.
Cowl mounted weapons usually had lower RoF, but this was compensated by larger caliber. Weapons in nose are not so easy to jam while heavy maneuvering. Most of the guns used in nose installations during ww2 were designed from the outset for synchronization, particularly the MG 17 and ShVAK, and with reliable synch-mechanisms were very successful. It was just 10% RoF reduction for MG-17 with synch. Fuselage mounted guns do have the advantage of concentrated fire at all ranges, so a fighter with fuselage-mounted guns needed fewer of them for the same general effectiveness.
Aircraft engineers of all nation were aware of advantages and flaws of both variants and usually their choice was dictated by design of a particular aircraft model, type of the engine, location of fuel tanks, overall construction durability etc. and sometimes because of fighter doctrine, preferences and current need of a customer.
You’ve mentioned early Spitfires, but where you think you can place those 6 mgs with sufficient amount of ammo. No such place under Spitfire’s cowling. Design of Spitfire aircraft corresponds limits to the design of Spitfire gun platform. With no reliable larger caliber available for RAF at that time the choice was obvious. The same goes to the most Allied aircraft, while almost all Bf-109 models (very successful shooter btw) and all Soviet fighter types had cowl-mounted weapons, Fw190D, Ta152, Do335, La5, La7, Yak9 and many other types had nose mounted weapons and were really good fireshooters, so you’re not right about ‘everyone else’.








