The Stuka was nowhere near the best attack aircraft of WW2. Early in the war it was already too slow, but thanks to its use in Poland, France and the Soviet Union it got a reputation.
By 1943 Germany itself stopped manafacturing it, way past its past prime date.
I would never have known about them were it not for the book "Hurricane & Messerschmitt". I can only assume the low-recoil Vickers 40mm guns were using tungsten-core ammunition as they really could kill tanks with them. But I read they only served in the Desert campaign as the Allies switched to rocket-firing fighter-bombers thereafter. Even though the rockets used then were really not accurate enough for the purpose.
40mm was a 2 ponder ie fired a 2 pound shell. 57mm molliers gun in the DH mosquito fired a six pound shell
aeromariner 6 months ago
RAFはかっこいいなぁ
整備の様子がみれていいね!
thematuda1234 7 months ago
I've always like the Hurricane. Especially the tank buster variant.
Bossman1603 9 months ago
The A10 Warthog of its day. Great clip!
7rundle 1 year ago 6
@7rundle
yep, everyone knows about the stuka tankbuster, but this is so unknown
infernalzen 1 year ago 2
@infernalzen
The Stuka was nowhere near the best attack aircraft of WW2. Early in the war it was already too slow, but thanks to its use in Poland, France and the Soviet Union it got a reputation.
By 1943 Germany itself stopped manafacturing it, way past its past prime date.
McLarenMercedes 1 year ago
@infernalzen
I would never have known about them were it not for the book "Hurricane & Messerschmitt". I can only assume the low-recoil Vickers 40mm guns were using tungsten-core ammunition as they really could kill tanks with them. But I read they only served in the Desert campaign as the Allies switched to rocket-firing fighter-bombers thereafter. Even though the rockets used then were really not accurate enough for the purpose.
pinz2022 11 months ago
@pinz2022
only advantage i can see in rockets, is the ability to damage things with the HE
do damage to light vehiles, guns, enemy troops...?
infernalzen 10 months ago