FatR -> RE: Did Japanese employ skip-bombing? (11/17/2011 9:29:23 PM)
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ORIGINAL: Yaab Thanks, FatR. This answers my original question. Were fighter-bomber Zeros any good in the Pacific? Did they succesfully bomb ships using the shallow dive technique you mentioned? The hit on South Dakota in Philippine Sea (often attributed to a Judy divebomber, there were no Judies in Ozawa's first wave, only 45 A6M2 modified as fighter bombers and some Jills, which, AFAIK, served as formation leaders, rather than torpedo bombers). Ki-43 fighterbombers wrecked British DD Pathfinder. It is still not totally clear whether the aircraft that bombed Franklin was D4Y or P1Y, but if the latter, it most likely attacked from a shallow dive (P1Y was not capable of steep dives). Can't tell about possible hits on transports and landing ships. In general, by the time Japanese widely accepted this technique, odds were so stacked against the attackers regardless of their approach, that it, in a modified form, was mostly used for kamikaze attacks (kamikaze were supposed to drop their bombs before crashing, to maximize damage, just from altitude that excluded successfully pulling out from the dive).
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