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In article ,
Hobo writes: Has there ever been an aircraft with a gun permanently aligned off-center? I don't mean swivel mounted, but permanently fixed at a point other than straight ahead. Quite a few, actually. Assuming that you're willing to stipulate teh defensive guns on bombers ranging from the Be.2C in WW I (ANd yes, they did drop a few bombs) to the Tu-22M Backfire. In terms of fighters, It's been done a number of times. The most mentioned would be the upward-pointing "Shrage Muzik" guns on German Night Fighters. This allowed them to formate on RAF night bombers in the one quadrant with no lookouts or guns, and shoot into the largest possible area - teh entire planform of the aircraft. The Japanese tried something similar. Wouldn't a gun pointed at a downward angle make ground attack easier? Check out the Junkers-Larson ground attack prototype made for the U.S. Army in the 1920s. It was basically an all-metal Junkers monoplane transport with something like 30 .45 Calibre Thomson Submachineguns firing at vatious angle through the bottom fuselage. The idea was that it would fly along trench lines at low altitude, saturating the trenches with bullets. (The opinions of the Gun Plumber on board who'd have to change 30 75 round drum magazines after each pass has not been recorded. Rest assured that it would have been short, to teh point, disapproving, and contained a lock of words that rhymed with "Duck".) In the 1930s, the French built a large gunship with a downward firing 105mm Howitzer. From the 1960s on, the USAF, and several allied nations, have flown various transports (C-47, C-119, C-130) with arrays of guns pointing out of the side, aimed by maintaining a pylon turn around the target. (Well, at first, at least) These guns have range from 7.62mm machine guns to 105mm Howitzers, backed up by an extensive sensor suite and ballistic computers. The side-firing bit allows you to engange targets without flying over them, which is generally considered a good thing. -- Pete Stickney A strong conviction that something must be done is the parent of many bad measures. -- Daniel Webster |
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