You cannot teach shooting in an La7 from a wing mounted fighter or, from a wing mounted fighter's perspective. Either ryno or a guest like Latrobe will have to give a separate clinic on inline centric shooting requirements.
Bustr,
While the course is taught with a wing-mounted gun platform, I believe the vast majority of fundamentals discussed and practiced (other than "one-wing" shooting) apply to all aircraft and gun platforms. Two things I stress
repeatedly in the Intro to Gunnery course are 1) firing at close range (convergence or closer) and 2) being unloaded while shooting. Both the "Shoot Around the Clock" and "Aim Small, Miss Small" exercises done during the course focus on attempting precise unloaded shooting, which is of course useful with either nose-mounted or wing-mounted gun platforms. Those exercises are also meant to expose issues with nose bounce, stick scaling, torque effects and over-correction (especially over-ruddering), which can affect aiming and the bullet stream, regardless of gun platform.
You make an important point that the single bullet stream in nose-mounted guns is affected by small angle changes and that is magnified with range. I definitely could mention your point specifically during the course, so I appreciate that input. I do suggest during the course that everyone try the shooting exercises on their own, and at different ranges, in the aircraft they tend to fly, so that might be a good item to mention at that point.
I do see a lot of ammo wastage in Bat's shooting, largely due to a lack of precise aim and a good deal of over-correcting. Those issues could possibly be improved by working with some shooting exercises. I think that was Fugi's point, and I would agree as the exercises I showed him are not just for wing-mounted guns.
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Ryno