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When the experts insisted that fighter guns had to be mounted in the wings, they created a fatal problem known as the "Convergence Trap." Allied pilots were forced to be perfect snipers, harmonizing their guns to cross at a single fixed point. If the enemy was too close or too far, the bullets would spray harmlessly wide, wasting thousands of rounds and getting American pilots killed. It seemed like the only way to fight... until a radical engineer ignored the rulebook and clustered an entire arsenal right in the nose of a twin-boomed freak. This is the untold story of how "overkill" became the deadliest standard in aerial warfare. Early in World War Two, the Convergence Trap was costing lives. But Lockheed engineer Kelly Johnson refused to accept it. Ignoring critics who said his idea was too complicated for combat, he mounted four machine guns and a 20 millimeter cannon together in the center of the P-38 Lightning. When pilots unleashed this tight “Nose Cluster” in the Pacific, it did not just hit targets — it created a “Buzz Saw” effect that tore enemy aircraft apart and turned the P-38 into the "Fork-Tailed Devil" that terrorized the Japanese empire. Pilots Mocked His "Buzz Saw" Guns — Until It Vaporized A Zero 🔔 Subscribe for more untold WW2 stories: / / @echoesofwar20th 👍 Like this video if you learned something new 💬 Comment below: What other WW2 tactics should we cover? #ww2 #worldwar2 #p38lightning #kellyjohnson #aerialcombat #pacificwar #aviationhistory #richardbong #warbirds #usaf #history #dogfight ⚠️ Disclaimer: This video presents dramatized storytelling based on historical WW2 events researched from publicly available sources. While we strive for accuracy and engaging narratives, some details may be simplified or contain inaccuracies. This content is for entertainment purposes and should not be cited as an academic or authoritative historical source. For verified historical information, please consult professional military historians, official archives, and peer-reviewed publications.