Hi HoHun,
it looks to me you mix up math with logic!!
We also can put logic into words, but of course this need the will and skill to read and understand the words. I have to admid that my skill in reading fomulas is not the best, but as BK´s example point out, your skill to read and understand words isnt the best eighter.
Maybe it wasnt as clear in the sentence you did quote, but the whole contex make it pretty clear:".........it did provide a much better hitprobability than the relative slow firing Hispano....... specialy if the smaler gun provide a much higher hitprobability."
I clearly talk about the different in ROF and the gun and its hitprobability. If i talk about a MG, why shal i talk about a single shot??? Yes sure, now you will come and say, no you dont told that both shoot a burst of fire of a given length, but realy, do i need to say that the sun dazzles??
I explained several times exact the same, but you always didnt agree!!
Example: "......if you agree that a shotgun provide a higher hitprobability, while shooting to a smal fast moving target, than a normal rifle, you also must agree that a MG, which shoot 12 rps have a higher hitprobability than a rifle.
And of course also 6 x 13rps(78 rps) provide a higher hitprobability, while shooting to this smal target, than 4 x 10rps(40 rps)."
Your answer:
">if you agree that a shotgun provide a higher hitprobability ...
The point is, I don't."
lol i just saw this in your last reply:
">Knegel wrote about fast firing and slow firing guns in what you quoted. You simply cut away the RoF from the equation yourself when you believe it talks about both of those guns firing only a single bullet."
BK dont believe i talk about the guns only shoot one round, thats the point you dont get. I didnt talk about the guns only shot one round, i was talking about the gun hitprobability!! You remeber?? Hitprobability(bullet) * ROF = Gun hitprobability. Since ROF implement rounds per sec, we have a clear determined timespan and number of rounds. Or will you tell me the Gunpower on Thonys page also is a wrong term?
Of course if you only relay on your formulas, without to see other possibilitys of defination, you will get problems to understand someone who dont know the exact terms you use.
And if you only refer to pages, where someone who dont know many of the displayed sighns cant find a correlation to your examples, noone will be able to understand you, if he dont understand you already before!!
As i told, i dont would expect from someone to learn a new language just in a discussion, while iam able to talk in the known language.
And if you refuse to point more exact to what you refer to, how shal i understand?
"One more offense like that, and I'll put you on my ignore list."
Is a question, where you dont be willing to answer and offence for you??
Or are you not able to answer?
From my point of view your way to discuss is pretty much a offence. Looks like you dont be able to jump over your shaddow and to agree that my 1st statement wasnt wrong, though not good formulated from your knowledge of terms.
I many times told that iam not used to your terms, but you simply didnt care and go on to tell me that i dont understand this, but now i would say its the other way around.
You know many formulas and how the theory work in some special situation, but it looks to me you dont be able to implement it into a different contex, into the real world.
I think this is enough, you also can set me onto your ignore list(you realy seems to think you be very important, if you threat with this), for now i dont got any new information out of your formulas. The only new information i got is that the 'possibility theory' seems to use some simplyfied terms.
Karnak,
as far as i know the Ki43 and A6M was the main japanese fighter even in 1945.
When newer fighters came in more big numbers, the numerical and skill advantage of the US fighters(pilots) already was much to high.
All statements i found regarding the Ki44 was like this: Lack of fuel and crew protection; very vulnerable. The main version of the Ki61 was armned with 4 x .50cal and had roughly the performence of the Bf109F2 and that in 1943-45, who realy need to fear this planes anyway in a F6F, F4U, P51D or P38J/L??
Most other japanese planes was also smal, without effective tailgunners and not nearly as good protected like many other allied and axis planes.
Many times i told that this thought specialy count for the in general light protected japanese planes, and that while a escortmission the time to shoot and hitprobability was a not a unimportant factor( to bring the interceptor off the target), but if you look to the result in war, you clearly can see that the 6 - 8 x .50cal armaments was pretty successfull, even vs the german fighters(even the P51B was successfull).
The brits did use only two hispanos in their Spits, this cannon hitprobability is even smaler than the 4 x 20mm of the F4U-1C, whould the P51 also have had only 2 x 20mm with 120 rounds(12 sec to shoot) + 2 x 50cal to keep the flight performence high?? Is there any hint that the Brits had a higher kill quote than the US boy´s?? Didnt the brits shot down well protected 109E´s and 110C´s without many problems with their poor 8 x .30cal??
The question remain: How many armament power is needed to bring a fighter down in a time and on a distance that the pilot would call satisfying and is a bit more satisfying worth to give up much of the time to shoot.
My assumtion is and was: If the pilot follow the instruction and go very close to shoot, it dont matter if he carry 6 x .50cal or 4 x 20mm while attacking a fighter, cause both armaments are able to cause deadly damages if the hitprobability is high. When the hitprobability go down, much of the damagepower advantage get lost by the more bad armament hitprobability.
To prove me wrong, you need to prove that the US armament was insufficient for their need.
Most of you realy sounds like the US pilots had real problems to shoot a enemy figher down, just like the brits while BoB vs the Bombers.
I realy start to wonder how the Ki43, Ki61 and Machi pilots was able to shoot something down at all.
Greetings, Knegel