The 'Comic' British Pipe That Made Luftwaffe Pilots Fear Low Altitude
Автор: Covert Weapons
Загружено: 2026-02-21
Просмотров: 31
Описание:
A short steel tube sat on crowded merchant decks, angled skyward beside cargo gear and boiler piping. It looked too simple to matter, but crews loaded canisters by hand, watched the gauge, and fired during low attack runs. In smoke, spray, and engine noise, the Holman Projector worked less like a gun and more like a hurried shipboard procedure.
Britain needed stop-gap anti-aircraft defense for merchant ships while convoy losses were rising and proper guns were in short supply. Warships received priority weapons, ammunition was constrained, and civilian crews had limited training time. The answer was not precision fire. It was a fast, cheap system that could disrupt German dive-bomber attacks and force earlier bomb releases.
The Holman used compressed air first, then boiler steam, to launch Mills grenade canisters from a smooth tube. Its strength was low cost, low recoil, and quick installation. Its weakness was accuracy: no rifling, inconsistent pressure, and condensation in steam lines could produce unreliable shots and logged failures. It remained useful as visible disruption until better anti-aircraft guns spread through the fleet. Subscribe for more deep dives into British military history.
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