Hi B17sam,
>As it took a certain amount of time for the shell to reach our altitude, we had that interval of time to move a foot or so in any direction to avoid the fickle finger of fate. Conversely, any movement, or no movement at all might cause the flak shell to go straight up our gluteus maximus, and we'd become nothing but another statistic.
Hm, for an individual crewman, moving about would make no difference.
However, for the entire aircraft, evasive action actually made sense.
I have tried to calculate just how much sense, using a simple approximation, based on the information that 1 in 16000 shells shoots down the aircraft, and that the lethal radius of the 8.8 cm shell is 4.5 m. (I had to assume the gunnery errors are of equal magnitude in azimuth, elevation and range, and to pretend that the target is a dimensionless dot, so it's not terribly accurate
Both bits from information are from the same book I quoted in the original thread:
http://www.ww2aircraft.net/forum/avi...lem-10466.html (60 year old problem)
Choose a distance you have moved from the aim point on the horizontal axis, then read the relative "probability of kill" from the vertical axis.
For example, moving from the aim point by 30 m (ca. 100 ft) would reduce the chances of the Flak to down the aircraft to 50% of what it would be if the aircraft stayed on the aim point.
However, the Flak directors were capable of "following" climbs and turns, so any evasive manoeuvres would have to be unpredictable, random, and probably somewhat violent.
(By the way, prior to the war the lethal radius of the 8.8 cm Flak was thought to be 15 m instead of just 4.5 m, so heavy Flak turned out to be just 2.7% as effective as expected. However, the effect of bombing attacks had been expected to be much greater, too ... probably an indication that in times of peace, weapon effectiveness tends to be exaggerated.)
Regards,
Henning (HoHun)