This should have been posted yesterday but I forgot ::)
1944: Most improbable V1 rocket kill is scored by turret gunner of an RAF Grumman "Avenger" on anti-E-boat patrol over the English Channel - at night!
Gryshnak
1944: Most improbable V1 rocket kill is scored by turret gunner of an RAF Grumman "Avenger" on anti-E-boat patrol over the English Channel - at night!
And the Wildcat was better known in the RN as the Martlet, yes?
A.
P.S thats pretty improbable...
....it used a pulse jet!
And the Wildcat was better known in the RN as the Martlet, yes?
I can't find any record of it serving with the RAF.
To be technical, that's too emphatic: it would have been highly improbable or, as a 19th century billiard player would say, a fluke shot (basically, accidental).My point was that it would have been impossible for anyone to shoot down a rocket during WWII. There was no defence against the V2 at the time.
To be technical, that's too emphatic: it would have been highly improbable or, as a 19th century billiard player would say, a fluke shot (basically, accidental).
Not at all. I still say it was impossible.
I agree. I can think of no defence against the V2 in its time. Of course we now live in an age where missile can down missiles...
To elaborate for my pedantic friend H. However unlikely it might have been that they would even hit it, anyone bringing down a V1 was presumably aiming at it. Being a comparatively slow cruise missile it would be plainly visible & the engine made a terrible racket. This would not be possible in the case of the V2 rocket as it would have reached its target before anyone saw it or heard it coming.
Even with today's technology, however, it is not impossible for a rocket to get past anti-missile defenses any more than it's impossible for said rocket to intersect the flight path of a cannonball shot at the steeple of St. John of the Improbable (or whatever).
...but Charlie, you're neglecting the fact that its at St. John's!
A.
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