Hi Vermillion,
>If you look at a mixed belt (what AH represents) ie the Allied late war standard of 1 AP - 1 HE, and the German late war standard of 1 AP - 1 HE - 1 Mine (from memory its on Gustins website), you will see that the HE content of the two mix's is almost equal.
The effect of explosives is not linear, and simply adding up might lead to false conclusions here.
The mine shells were designed to explode within the aircraft structure and destroy the load-bearning aircraft skin. A small charge would blow a hole in the skin, and the damage would be confined between the ribs or stringers the skin was rivetted to.
A larger charge would blow a larger hole into the skin, and addionally rip the skin from the rivets and destroy the load-bearing capabilities of the adjacent skin panels as well. This would weaken the aircraft structure much more seriously than two smaller, confined holes would have done.
As a result, one mine shell was considerably more desctructive against aircraft targets than two conventional high-explosive rounds, even when their combined charge weight was equal to that of the mine shell.
Regards,
Henning (HoHun)