Anti-aircraft warfare: Difference between revisions

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As aircraft started to be used against ground targets on the battlefield, the AA guns could not be traversed quickly enough at close targets and, being relatively few, were not always in the right place (and were often unpopular with other troops), so changed positions frequently. Soon the forces were adding various [[machine-gun]] based weapons mounted on poles. These short-range weapons proved more deadly, and the "[[Manfred von Richthofen|Red Baron]]" is believed to have been shot down by an anti-aircraft [[Vickers machine gun]]. When the war ended, it was clear that the increasing capabilities of aircraft would require better means of acquiring targets and aiming at them. Nevertheless, a pattern had been set: anti-aircraft warfare would employ heavy weapons to attack high-altitude targets and lighter weapons for use when aircraft came to lower altitudes.
 
[[File:AA-Predictor-Nr1MarkIII-001.jpg|thumb|The No. 1 Mark III Predictor that was used with the [[QF 3.7-inch AA gun]] was a mechanical computer.]]
[[File:Antiaircraft defence Sweden 1934.jpg|thumb|Shooting with anti-aircraft gun in Sweden 1934]]