Originally posted by Maverick:
Heya,
Ammo selection could be dicey at times due to supply and logistices concerns. Any time you put a half inch hole in any critical part of a plane it would have an effect. An AP round in the engine would have a better chance of doing it in than plain ball.
From what I recall reading about ammo selection, WW2 ordinance loadout was a mix. It had ball, ap, ap incendiary and plain tracer rounds. Every 5th round was a tracer. To help the pilots know when they were about out of ammo the ammo would be all tracer at the ends of the belts. The increase in tracer would tell the pilot he was almost out of shells. the nice thing about the 50's was that it had higher muzzle velocity and shot "flatter" in trajectory than did 20mm. This is an aid in longer range shooting particularly in air to air.
After having seen some of the damage just plain ball ammo in 50 cal does to harder targets such as old tank and M113 hulks I have no doubts as to its efficacy on aircraft. Certainly the Soviets learned about it when their Hinds were being taken out by 50 cal's in Afganistan. (I recall this being a welcome surprise to others in my unit.) The Afganis were using some American MG's as well as captured Soviet 12.7mm (same stuff actually as far as effects on target.)
The stingers got the Soviets attention as well
Surely you know what will happen when a string of AP M2 rounds hits then metal like a plane's skin...it punchs right through, sure it leaves a hole but it does not do nearly as much damage as a ball type round upon impact...granted enough of any shell can severly damage a plane.
I think maybe you got mixed up
My point was that, I am not aware of AH modeling any other round type then .50 ball. I could easily be wrong.
I may of perhaps found why killing tanks was so hard...
P-51 has 1880 rounds of .50, divide by 5 and you get the amount of rounds that aren't tracers. Thats 376 rounds. Divide it by 3 to get count of the ball, ap, and ind rounds,
125 rounds per type (Actually 125.3
)
No wonder pilots didn't like tracer rounds.
And that's not taking into account the last 2 or 3 feet of the belt is all tracer.
Anyway...the .50 model seems right to me if it's all ball ammo (I'm not sure but I think tracer is calculated in ballistics as a normal ball)
It seems to me though, that cannons act as normal HE rounds when in contact with planes, thus the tremendous damage. But the Hispanos, upon coming in contact with tanks, penetrate like AP rounds.
If someone would verify this as correct for .50 AP I'd like to do some calculations
projectile velocity 732 m/s
projectile mass 0.093 kg
caliber 12.7 mm
If someone would post the Hispano's AP stats I'd appreciate it too
- Jig