B29Gunner wrote:
JDK wrote:
Those pointing out the post-W.W.II use of turrets might like to include the advent of radar gun laying, and the troubles the B-29s actually had over Korea, one of the few occasions W.W.II fighter vs turreted bomber battles occurred after 1945.
Regarding B-29's in Korea, it's hardly a fare argument to compare a fire control system designed in early 1942 (and who's lineage stretches all the way back to WW1) to an aircraft like the Mig-15 who's capabilities could hardly be imagined when the Superfort was born.
The point remains that the
reality was that the B-29s in Korea were defended by an essentially outclassed system; while I'm not impugning the design or quality of the turret and fire control system, it wasn't, as you agree, up to the job of preventing the MiGs getting through to the B-29s. There wasn't a better turret or bomber self-defence system coming to replace it either - fighter defence and withdrawal were the options.
The other references made in this thread to post-war turrets relate to theoretical or wargame scenarios for the most part, a highly unreliable source of data on efficacy. It's one thing to point out what had what kind of gear; it's another to see if it was effective at the job, and another again to see what the real alternatives might be.
Not sure what SaxMan's point re- the B17D is - engine power and growth tended to be countered by military load growth throughout aviation. Relevent here is the development and use of armour glass, aircraft armour and self-sealing fuel tanks, all developments learned the hard way in the early days of W.W.II; the passive defence counterpart of the active defence of turrets (or speed). And it all had weight / drag penalties.
The Lancaster and other RAF heavies were being 'up-gunned' officially as the war progressed, once the move from the British 'standard' .303 ammunition became viable. The Rose turret with twin .50s and radar gun laying for cloud and at night were being introduced very late in the war - but by then the best Luftwaffe crews and fighters were gone. The Canadian-built Lancasters were fitted with Martin mid-uppers (lower profile- see the CWH example) as standard, as well.
More interesting was the unofficial fitting of a single .50 in the ventral position 'hole' by some Canadian Lancaster and Halifax crews. (Rather like the ventral position in Ol 927 recreated by our own Gary A.) An alert crewman in that position offerd virtually no drag, little weight penalty and the best observation point for anti-nightfighter lookout. Sadly they were removed to put in H2S radar, increasing the losses by an unknown amount.
Those addicted to the box formations of heavies might like to recall the Mosquito
was used for long-range daylight bombing, mainly tactical, rather than strategic, but that was due to numbers available. As Ryan's spotted, the issue wasn't that the Mozzie wasn't good enough (or better than the complex, expensive heavies) but that producing more wasn't possible - likewise the success of mass-producing the B-24 - the most produced W.W.II US type - meant you had a lot of B-24s to use, whether they were the best option or not. (Note I'm not suggesting the Mozzie was a
perfect alternative - but it was
as perfect an alternative as the RAF and USAAF's heavies.)
Which neatly brings us back to the B-29s in Korea. You fight the battles you have with the weapons you've got. Sometimes they're fit for the job, sometimes they aren't. Performance shortfalls are made good by blood, or you lose the battle.
Just some thoughts.