JeffroK
Posts: 6391
Joined: 1/26/2005 Status: offline
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quote:
ORIGINAL: Yaab We all know that Japanese fighters equipped with 7.7mm MGs cannot destroy Allied fighters which sport level 1 armor. They can damage them, but they cannot outright destroy them. I thought this would also apply to 7.7mm AAMGs used by Japanese LCUs. However, in my DDB-C tests I was able to destroy, with fire from 7.7mm AAMGs, the following Allied aircraft when they dropped to 100 and 1000 feet for strafing runs: A-20A Havoc (durability 35, armor 1) P-40E Warhawk (durability 29, armor1) Wirraway (durability 28, armor 0) However, I was not able to destroy any version of Beaufighter (durability 38,armor 1. The Jap LCUs in the test were exclusively armed with 7.7mm AAMGs. No 13.2mm AAMGs or cannons were present. So I went to Tracker to check the values of both the AAMG and MG, and it seems the AAMG version has effect of 4 while the MG version is just effect 2, with other criteria being more or less the same. So if you think you can strafe hapless Japs with impunity, think twice. Your armor is not enough! From http://users.telenet.be/Emmanuel.Gustin/fgun/fgun-pe.html No country had so many different guns in use as Japan, with so many different types of ammunition. The Japanese Army and Navy independently produced nearly identical weapons, and with non-interchangeable ammunition; this is symbolic for the lack of cooperation between the two services. The Army used copies of the Vickers as the Type 89 fixed and the Te-1, which was a flexible version of this gun. The 7.7 mm Type 89 flexible was an indigeneous magazine-fed design used in flexible, defensive installations, twin guns being placed on a single mount. If these guns were used individually, they were known as the Te-4 or Type 89 (modified single). The Type 100 or Type 1 were Japanese versions of a Czech design, also used in twins, and firing 7.92 x 57 ammunition. Finally, the German MG 15 was used the Type 98 flexible. The Japanese Navy used the Type 92, a copy of the Lewis and again used in flexible installations, the Type 97, an improved Vickers, and the Type 1, also based on the MG 15. These varied with ROF from 750 to 1500 rpm using the same ammunition, plus fuselage mounted weapons had to contend with syncronisation and had further constraints.
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