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| IL-2 Sturmovik: Cliffs of Dover Latest instalment in the acclaimed IL-2 Sturmovik series from award-winning developer Maddox Games. |
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#1
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Does anyone know why bombs were carried vertically nose up in the 111? I've just assumed it had something to do with arming the fuse in the nose as they fell away.
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#2
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The vertical position is simply to carry more bombs (moar power) in a same volume.
About the nose up, perhaps it is easier for the ground personal to put them like this ,or if the bomber accidentally live their bomb before taking off, the detonators won't be damage (protect detonator from flak too).
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#3
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I think it was just done that way to squeeze more bombs in the bay. The He-111 was initially developed as a civilian transport to circumvent the restrictions of the Versailles treaty, it even had a different, airliner-style cockpit.
I guess it wouldn't take much for an allied engineer/designer or an intelligence analyst to take a look at a few photos and identify its potential for bombing if it had been built with a cavernous fuselage from the start. My assumption is that they went with a narrower fuselage partly to maintain appearances and partly because it was indeed used in civilian roles as well (mail carrier, etc), but when it was converted to a bomber this limited available bomb loads, hence the vertical bomb storage. If you compare it with the Ju88 for example (which was designed and built as a pure bomber), you'll see that the 88 not only used a horizontal bomb bay arrangement but it also had dual bomb bays. That being said i'm not 100% certain of this, i'm just piecing together known bits of information and making a reasonable assumption. I could still be wrong and they might have had a different reason altogether |
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