perseus
Active member
I'm reading about the anti-aircraft defences Germany used to protect the Reich in the latter stages of the war. The anti aircraft shells such as the 88mm were disadvantaged by the lack of an effective proximity fuse. However, it's still surprising how ineffective they were.
Consider the US daylight raids. Wikipedia says
This is still a very large area in which to explode a shell, surely any half decent gun battery in daylight couldn't avoid exploding shells inside the box? Worse still in such a confined space each bomber must have been very near to the detonating shell. So it seems that either the AA fire was very inaccurate or that the aircraft were largely immune to most shrapnel.
I performed a few calculations to determine how many rounds would be required to guarantee impacting directly on an airframe by chance. The answer is surprisingly few. Assuming a 200 sq metre area for the B17, these boxes are about 7.5% opaque with airframe! Obviously, it's difficult to miss after 10 rounds. So perhaps smaller more numerous, impact fused shells, which detonate just after contact inside the frame would be more effective than shrapnel? My estimate suggests that a few hundred L70 Bofors guns equipped with such shells would be very effective against such a formation of bombers.
The nightime raids of the RAF over wider spaces would have been rather more difficult to counter since they were far more widely spread, being sometimes hundreds of miles long, however, there were perhaps other means of dealing with these.
What am I missing?
Consider the US daylight raids. Wikipedia says
[the bomber combat box] stacked 750 ft (230 m) vertically, 650 ft (200 m) from front to back, and 1,170 ft (360 m) laterally. This final variation presented flak gunners with a small target, produced excellent bomb patterns, and was both easy to fly and control.
This is still a very large area in which to explode a shell, surely any half decent gun battery in daylight couldn't avoid exploding shells inside the box? Worse still in such a confined space each bomber must have been very near to the detonating shell. So it seems that either the AA fire was very inaccurate or that the aircraft were largely immune to most shrapnel.
I performed a few calculations to determine how many rounds would be required to guarantee impacting directly on an airframe by chance. The answer is surprisingly few. Assuming a 200 sq metre area for the B17, these boxes are about 7.5% opaque with airframe! Obviously, it's difficult to miss after 10 rounds. So perhaps smaller more numerous, impact fused shells, which detonate just after contact inside the frame would be more effective than shrapnel? My estimate suggests that a few hundred L70 Bofors guns equipped with such shells would be very effective against such a formation of bombers.
The nightime raids of the RAF over wider spaces would have been rather more difficult to counter since they were far more widely spread, being sometimes hundreds of miles long, however, there were perhaps other means of dealing with these.
What am I missing?
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