« Reply #31 on: May 07, 2014, 11:51:15 PM »
Sure, but by the time enough rounds to have really significant such effects on the massive Mossie wing have hit it, by AH model the wing would long since have departed the aircraft.
Concentrated fire is what you want, in both AH and WWII. Wing guns were set to converge for a reason.
But in WWII, effective concentration meant "Most rounds hitting the targeted plane" not "most rounds hitting the same two foot of wing-root (And if half your rounds are hitting what is labeled "outboard" wing, then you get halfway to a wingroot severed and halfway to an outboard section severed, which means you get squat.)" They flew with actual wind, turbulence, and other random factors, sans icons to tell range and didn't have hundreds or thousands of hours of gunnery practice at actual human flown airplanes under their belts, as most of us do. Yet they still brought down fighters with .50s and .303s.
« Last Edit: May 07, 2014, 11:55:11 PM by BnZs »
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