AirTech wrote:Dilandu wrote:Yeah, and this gun failed mizerably; to survive the impact inside the barrel, they were so durable, that the oly way to do some damage with them was to achieve direct hit. When they fall on the ground, they simply made a deep hole, and harmlessly detonated on the bottom.
Germans... They never really knew how to build weapons.
The lack of a proximity fuse was the core of the problem. The Americans got it working in time to block the V-1 threat but the Germans trailed behind. The 280mm cannon deployed by the US Army was about as big as you can go with road mobile gun as opposed to the railway guns that got extensive use during the first world war (but these require a preexisting rail network to move the components. The German V-3 could have done severe damage to London without the allies air superiority but static guns like this require static front lines.
To be fair, German gun issues may be more a matter of getting far too excited about big and powerful without sufficient concern for ammunition, transportation, practicality, and fitting it all into an integrated, sensible organization. Having had a fine learning experience in WWI helped a lot, and they were able to go back to the drawing board and create a new model, nominally mechanized army thereafter with an air force that paid fair attention to the close air support mission.
In their next chances to see how things worked though, they found themselves in conflicts far too easy then far too hopeless (without being able to recognize the difference) to maintain good habits. And Nazi leadership and paramilitary forces aren't conducive to reasonable adjustments of means to ends or of ends to realistic expectations.