Author Topic: Luftwaffe ATG Rockets?  (Read 1910 times)

Offline Virage

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Luftwaffe ATG Rockets?
« on: April 16, 2004, 02:28:23 PM »
Did they have/use ATG Rockets or only ATA?
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Offline Batz

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Luftwaffe ATG Rockets?
« Reply #1 on: April 16, 2004, 02:49:14 PM »
ATG

24 × 2.16 in (55 mm) R4/M rockets

14 × 220 lb (100 kg) RBS B/F21 rocket bombs

3 × 9.84 in (280 mm) WGr.28 rockets in clusters of 2

Panzerblitz anti-tank rockets in 2.16, 3.07 and 5.12 in (55, 78 and 130 mm) calibers

Offline lasersailor184

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Luftwaffe ATG Rockets?
« Reply #2 on: April 16, 2004, 03:09:30 PM »
I still don't quite see how the rockets can do much damage vs. tanks.


They aren't moving that fast, they don't have much explosives...
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Offline Hooligan

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Luftwaffe ATG Rockets?
« Reply #3 on: April 16, 2004, 03:55:30 PM »
Normal artillery rounds have to have "thick" skins because the round has to retain structural integrity when it is suddenly propelled down the muzzle.  Rocket munitions do not suffer from this requirement and thus contain a lot more explosive for a given size.  This is probably the answer.

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Offline Batz

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Luftwaffe ATG Rockets?
« Reply #4 on: April 16, 2004, 04:18:01 PM »
In a book I am reading a FW 190 pilot, Hauptman Erhard Jähnert Staffelkäpitan of 2./Schlachtgeschwader 3, recounts his 599th mission flying a FW 190F-8 over of the Kurland Bridgehead:

Quote

On 16 February 1945, I attacked enemy armor in my Focke Wolf 190. It had already gotten quite close to our main line of resistance in foggy weather about 10 kilometers southeast of Tukkum.

Three of my comrades closed up with me when I designated the target. We dove on the group of armor and fired our rockets. I was fortunate enough to knock out three enemy tanks in three passes. Three more were crippled by my comrades. Since I expended my rockets, I tried to destroy the remaining tanks, which had already turned back, with my on-board weapons. In the process my aircraft took one or two hits in the lubrication system and also in the compass connections.

Orientation was no longer possible. Vision forward was prevented by the oil film that built up on the front windshield. The cockpit canopy was also stuck, so I sat in my aircraft as if I were in a coffin.

When the engine oil ran out and the engine temperature rose, I had to make an emergency landing. I could only see to the rear, so, with a “look back” I landed on an open field near an abandoned artillery position about 30 meters from a farmstead and 80 meters from a high-tension electric line.

I am certain that my landing rates as a most extraordinary piece of good luck in aviation.

I had neither pistol nor identification with me. When I saw several soldiers in camouflage parkas draw near I grabbed the flare pistol from the cockpit and waited.

Again my luck held. They were Latvians from one of the two Latvian Waffen-SS divisions. They took me to their battalion command post.

I was well received in the grenadiers’ bunker and fed. Soon I was driven back to my airfield.


Incidentally, Erhard Jähnert received the knights cross on 18 May 1943 as a Leutnant flying stukas while attached to Stukageschwader 4.

Later as Staffelkäpitan of 9./Stukageschwader 2, he took part in that squadrons greatest success when it sank 3 soviet destroyers in the Black Sea south of the Crimea.

He was later removed from combat duty and assigned as an instructor. In the fall of 1944 at his own personal request he was transferred to the Kurland Bridgehead and made Staffelkäpitan of 2./Schlachtgeschwader 3.

He destroyed 25 Soviet tanks while flying the FW 190F-8 over Kurland. On the day of surrender he took what passengers he could and flew out of Kurland and landed at Flensburg. He was put up for the oak leaves but in the hectic days just prior to German capitulation the award never went through.

Offline Virage

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Luftwaffe ATG Rockets?
« Reply #5 on: April 16, 2004, 04:42:22 PM »
Thnx Batz.

Did the 110 carry them too?  Or just the 190f8?
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Offline Urchin

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Luftwaffe ATG Rockets?
« Reply #6 on: April 16, 2004, 08:47:56 PM »
Think just the 190 did.. the 110 wasn't ever configured for anti-tank work as far as I know.  

Maybe we'll actually get some of those rockets in AH2.  It'd be nice.

Offline Karnak

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Luftwaffe ATG Rockets?
« Reply #7 on: April 16, 2004, 08:54:39 PM »
Quote
Originally posted by Urchin
Maybe we'll actually get some of those rockets in AH2.  It'd be nice.

Yes it would.  Here's hoping.
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Offline ra

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Luftwaffe ATG Rockets?
« Reply #8 on: April 16, 2004, 09:46:44 PM »
Quote
Originally posted by Urchin
Think just the 190 did.. the 110 wasn't ever configured for anti-tank work as far as I know.  

Maybe we'll actually get some of those rockets in AH2.  It'd be nice.

What kind of rockets was he firing?

Offline Batz

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Luftwaffe ATG Rockets?
« Reply #9 on: April 16, 2004, 11:19:30 PM »
Panzerblitz 2's.

Jähnert's staffel never used bombs against armor. When loaded with bombs they attacked troop concentrations. They strafed trains and soft vehicles and used rockets on armored vehicles. Incidentally strafing runs against tanks were enough to cause the Soviet tankers to abandon an attack and look for cover.

Another account tells of an attack on 25 Dec '44 while flying recce Jähnert spotted a group of 12 T-34s staging just behind the front.

Jähnert radioed to his staffel mates and he was joined by 2 other 190F-8s (one flown by Oberfeldwebel Bannedikt). Jähnert initiated the attack using his rockets and knocked out 3 of them. The other F-8s attacked and claimed 4 more tanks knocked out.

Later that day the German ground forces attacked in the same area and found 7 damage T-34s right where Jähnert reported them. 1 was completely burned out 2 were heavily damaged and beyond repair. 3 were quickly repaired and used by the Germans. The last 2 were out of commission for several days.

Offline VO101_Isegrim

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Luftwaffe ATG Rockets?
« Reply #10 on: April 17, 2004, 06:40:25 AM »
Well, as mentioned there were several ATG rockets with AT work appearing late in the war. Rather more common was the use of the Bordrakete 21cm (BR 21 or WrGr 21), adopted from the Army`s five barreled Nebelwerfer, and containing a serious sized warhead with a GP fragmantation warhead. Fighters carried a pair, larger craft : 4 to 6 of these. In effect, it meant that a 4-plane fighter Schwarm could effectiely match the broadside of a typical ww2 heavy cruiser..

But generally speaking, the LW preferred anti-tank/anti personell cluster bombs over rockets, covering a rather large area with hundreds of small sized (2-10kg) fragmentation or AT bomblets with cumulative warhead - the latter could pierce up to 100mm of armor, and since it usually hit the rather thin top armor of tanks, it was very effective. Such bombs could be mounted on just about any LW plane, fighters and bombers alike.
It made quite some sense given the relative ineffectiveness of ww2 unguided rockets - most of them carried only fragmentation warhead, and were ineffective vs. armor even in the unlikely case of scoring a direct hit, due to their great inaccuracy.

Speaking of rockets, I would like to learn about RAF aerial rockets of ww2 ! I have plenty of info on Soviet, US, and German, but could not find the details and types of those used by the RAF, ie. Typhoons etc.

Offline MiloMorai

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Luftwaffe ATG Rockets?
« Reply #11 on: April 17, 2004, 08:24:00 AM »
Well Ise there was 2 basic models. One that used a 6" shell(naval) as the warhead(HE) and the other had an anti-personnel warhead.

They were also used from ground launchers, the Land Mattress, with 30(late) or 32(early) 'barrels'.

The Land Mattress rocket was 1.77m long, weight 30.5kg, velocity 335m/s, range 7225m. A salvo would have 50% of the rockets falling in an area 215m long x 219m wide. It took 7.25 seconds to fire a salvo.

Offline Wilbus

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Luftwaffe ATG Rockets?
« Reply #12 on: April 17, 2004, 11:57:05 AM »
Wotan, what book is that from?
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Offline GScholz

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Luftwaffe ATG Rockets?
« Reply #13 on: April 17, 2004, 08:16:56 PM »
The Panzerblitz 1 was an R4M air to air rocket with an 80mm mortar shell as warhead. It was very effective against soft targets and infantry. The Panzerblitz 2 used the same R4M rocket, but used the warhead of the Panzerschreck anti-tank weapon making if very effective against armor. The Fw190F-8 carried 12 Pb1 or Pb2 in 1944, and 16 in 1945.



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Offline Rasker

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Luftwaffe ATG Rockets?
« Reply #14 on: April 19, 2004, 12:44:51 PM »
hmm, does the 190-F have any special A/G anti-armor loadouts?  Since this is one of the least used plane models in the game, perhaps giving it access to the IL2's rocket loadouts might help create a more historically accurate niche for this beast.