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Bofor Gun info.
I've been having a bit of a look for Bofors Gun information and although there is a lot of general information the specifics are a bit hard to find.
So far I can only find references to a contact fuse for the Bofors gun. Did they have timed fuses and how did the fuse setting work? I expect it would be a bit of a job fusing up to 120 rounds per minute I did find a hand book for the US Naval twin mount, but that has very little in common with the versions we are going to see. http://www.scribd.com/doc/34427598/B...unting-UK-1950 Has anyone got links to Bofors info? Cheers! |
So far as I know the Bofors (and the German 37, which is really the same gun) had only a contact fuse, with a timer so that the shell would explode at the end of it's range. I'll see what I can find.
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I was wondering about this a couple of weeks ago, as the rounds currently in game explode near the aircraft regardless of range. It would be good to find this out and make sure the game is accurate.
I wouldn't be suprised if there was some simple mechanism or electrical device which could change the fuse timing. Im always suprised by the technology of the 1940's. |
For what it's worth. In-game, the 40mm Bofors MkI gun has the following specs:
RateOfFire: 60 rounds per minute ActiveRange: 15 m to 4000 m Clip: 8 rounds ReloadTime: 1 sec Reserve: 1000 rounds With two round types: Type: MkI Mass: 0.88 kg Projectile spec: ArmorPiercing 0.4 kg / Concussion 0.05 kg of TNT MuzzleVelocity: 875 ms Fuse type: Contact Projectile lifeSpan: 20 sec Type: MkIIIT Mass: 0.93 kg Projectile spec: HighExplosive 0.5 kg / Fragmentation 0.067 kg of TNT MuzzleVelocity: 875 ms Fuse type: Timeout Projectile lifeSpan: 20 sec I'm thinking the amounts of exposive & other parameters might be modeled for in-game effects/results and might not necessarily reflect RL values. |
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Hold on a moment... only two types of ammo! Oh Jesus, what a whining this will be.... ROFL! :D ~S~ |
If this doesn't get them looking forward to the Bofors Gun then nothing will! :)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=roYQw...eature=related I wan't the co axial Bren Gun on mine please! Cheers! |
LOL! Damn the naysayers! Full speed ahead with AAA!
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The German Wehrmacht also used a great amount of captured Russian, Polish, British, Norvegian and French 40mm Bofors which were then called 4 cm Flak(r) (r= russisch/ russian) or 4 cm Flak (n) (n= norwegisch/norvegian) etc. The German 4 cm Bofors and the captured 40mm Bofors guns were mostly used in Norway, Denmark and France for Harbor and Airfield defence and very rarely mounted on vehicles. Also most of this guns were used by Kriegsmarine and Luftwaffe units, few of these guns were also mounted on ships. German 4 cm Flak 28: http://www.lonesentry.com/ordnance/w...s-flak-gun.jpg British Q.F. 40mm Mk I Bofors: http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2277/...c06f1574ac.jpg |
For the German side I expect to command this! ;)
20mm Flakvierling 38 http://www.stinch.com/militaria/imag...03-0586-25.jpg ~S~ |
I think BadAim is right. My grandfather was a bofors AA gunner during WW2 so I've got some books etc on the subject, found this in one of them.
The Bofors used a standard high-explosive shell with a sensitive point-detonating fuze designed to burst upon impact.* If the shell did not make contact with a target, the fuze destroyed the projectile at the tracer burnout range of approximately 3,500 yards. I have no idea how reliable this is but it seems to make sense. |
That's about correct as I can remember. I served on the Swedish motortorped boats 70- 71 and we used to bang away a lot on that gun the 40 mm lvakan m/36 since there was a lot of ammo in store since the war. Was like sitting in some machine that banged away at a slow pace and the projectile would only explode on impact and self-destruct at a far distance. You could see the detonations but no sound.
Viking |
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AA in WW2 used a proximity sensor that used radio waves that would bounce off aircraft and when the sensor detected the signal it would explode.
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Proximity fuses did not show up in the ETO until the Battle of the Bulge. |
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Maybe this of interest for you:
40-mm Automatic Gun M1 (AA) and 40-mm Antiaircraft Gun Carriages M2 and M2A1, TM 9-252, 1944 |
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