007 TECH: 57mm AutoCannon Mosquito Fighter-Bomber!
http://www.combatreform.org/cannonfighter
.htm
The
British placed automatic-loading 57mm cannon in the nose of very fast, all-wood
Mosquito fighter-bombers to attack U-Boats from a safe stand-off with devastating accuracy.
http://www.ww2aircraft.net/forum/weapons-systems-tech/awesome-mosquito-57mm-autocannon-9457
.html
THE AIRCRAFT
GUN
The
RAF then became interested in fitting the Molins Gun in the de Havilland Mosquito, to form an airborne anti-tank weapon to replace the
Hurricane IID which had been equipped with a pair of Vickers
40mm Class S guns.
The aircraft was duly developed as the Mosquito FB
Mk XVIII, popularly known as the "Tsetse", but by this time the RAF had lost interest in the anti-tank gun role so the aircraft were brought into service by
Coastal Command for anti-ship (and specifically anti-U-boat) purposes. The Tsetse, of which about 30 were built, served with No.248 Squadron during
1944 and is credited with sinking a U-boat.
Perhaps its most remarkable achievement occurred during an anti-shipping strike, when one Tsetse became involved in a melee with defending
Luftwaffe aircraft. A
Junkers 88 was careless enough to fly in front of a Tsetse, which promptly fired its big gun and demolished the
Ju-88 with one shot!
The Molins Gun, which was technically known to the RAF as the "
QF 6 pdr Class M
Mark I with
Auto Loader Mk
III" was based on the long-barreled (
50 calibre) gun. The gun weighed 487 kg (635 kg with autoloader) and was fully automatic, with a rate of fire of about 55 rounds-per-minute. The ammunition supply in the autoloader consisted of 21 rounds, held in five racks of unequal length, plus two additional rounds in the feedway. The rounds in each rack were fed by a combination of gravity and a spring-loaded arm and each rack was moved into place in turn by an electric motor. The gun normally used the plain AP shot (that is the only one shown in photographs), so had a high muzzle velocity of 890 m/sec (2,920 fps).
Against U-boat hulls, it was calculated that it would be able to penetrate the hull when striking at an angle of 45 degrees or more, at a range of about 1400m, even through 60cm of water. The gun/aircraft combination was extremely accurate, achieving a hit rate in training of 33% against tank-sized targets - compared with 5% for rocket projectiles. The Tsetse was eventually withdrawn from service when the RAF decided to use rocket projectiles for such roles because, despite their relative lack of accuracy, these were more suited to a variety of purposes and could easily be fitted, or removed, as required.
The Molins Gun in the Mosquito FB Mk XVIII was tested in the
USA in
1945, in comparison with the nearest
U.S. equivalent, the manually-loaded 75mm AN-Mk 5 in the PBJ-1H. This comparison was more valid than the
difference in calibre might suggest, for the 75x350R ammunition used in the
American gun (the same as was used by the
M4 tank gun in the
Sherman) was about the same overall size as the 57x441R, and the 6 pdr and 75mm tank guns were effectively interchangeable in the later
British tanks.
The Molins Gun impressed the
Americans with its performance and reliability and was considered superior to the 75mm as it could achieve a much higher rate-of-fire. It was noted that fairly violent evasive action and 2.5 positive Gs did not cause stoppages - which could not be said for manual loading!
The Americans recommended that the Molins autoloader could be considered as suitable not just for conventional guns--but also for recoilless weapons and spin-stabilised rockets.
http://uboat.net/allies/aircraft/mosquito.htm
The Mosquito fights the U-boats
From
November 1943 on wards the Mosquito was also used to attack U-boats shortly after, or just before they entered a port.
Warning of these opportunities was provided by code-breakers. At that moment the U-boats traveled on the surface, and therefore were vulnerable to rockets or the 57mm shells of the FB.
XVIII. For safety, the U-boats usually formed small convoys, with an escort of mine sweepers or so called Sperrbrecher ships, which had hulls reinforced with concrete as a protection against mines; both types bristled with anti-aircraft guns. For example, on 27
March 1944, 6 FB.VIs and 2 FB.XVIIIs attacked a convoy towards
La Pallice, formed by U-960 with a escort of four M-class mine sweepers and two Sprerrbrecher vessels. 3 mine sweepers suffered light damage, U-960 was badly damaged, 2
Mosquitos returned home with serious damage, and one crash-landed.
Total production of the Mosquito was 7781, including 1034 built in
Canada and
212 built in
Australia.
U-boats sunk by this aircraft
1944
U-976,
U-821 +, U-998
1945
U-804,
U-843,
U-1065, U-251 +, U-2359 +
8 U-boats lost to Mosquito aircraft.
+ means that the Mosquito shared the credit for the sinking.