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For other authors named David Doyle, see the disambiguation page.

269 Works 2,033 Members 13 Reviews 1 Favorited

About the Author

David Doyle's published works include - Panzerkampfwagen IV: The Backbone of Germany's WWII Tank Forces; The Military Machine - U.S. Dodge; M151 Mutt In Action; The Complete DUKW Historical Reference; P-47 Thunderbolt In Action: B-17F Flying Fortress. A Visual History of the B-17F Flying Fortress show more in WWII; USS Iowa (BB-61): The Story of 'The Big Stick' from 1940 to the Present. show less

Series

Works by David Doyle

USS Arizona (2011) 20 copies
USS Alabama (2013) 19 copies
M1 Abrams In Action (2013) 19 copies
PBY Catalina In Action (2015) 19 copies, 1 review
M24 Chaffee Walk Around (2009) 16 copies
K-5(E) Railgun (2011) 16 copies, 1 review
Higgins PT Boat On Deck (2012) 15 copies
B-24 Liberator In Action (2012) 15 copies
Gama Goat Detail In Action (2013) 15 copies
P-47 Thunderbolt In Action (2014) 14 copies
M50A1 Ontos (2010) 13 copies
USS Texas Squadron At Sea (2013) 13 copies
USS Lexington CV-2 (2013) 13 copies
USS North Carolina (2011) 12 copies
TBF/TBM Avenger In Action (2012) 11 copies
P-61 Black Widow In Action (2013) 11 copies, 1 review
A-1 Skyraider In Action (2017) 10 copies
USS Kidd On Deck (26010) (2012) 10 copies
M1 Abrams (Images of War) (2019) 10 copies
M151 Mutt In Action (2012) 9 copies
U.S Half Tracks: Part 2 (2016) 9 copies
F8F Bearcat Detail In Action (2013) — Author — 8 copies
251 Half-Track (2015) 7 copies
The M3 Lee 7 copies
UH-1 Huey (2017) 7 copies
SBD Dauntless (2019) 6 copies
Panther Tank In Action (2018) 5 copies
SR-71 Blackbird In Action (2017) 4 copies
Flying Wings (2015) 4 copies
P-39 Airacobra In Action (2015) 4 copies
In Action B-36 Peacemaker (2023) 4 copies
M60 Tank: US Cold War MBT (2023) 3 copies
F-4 PHANTOM II IN ACTION (2015) 3 copies
CH-47 Chinook In Action (2018) 3 copies
F-14 Tomcat in Action (2018) 2 copies
F-15 Eagle in Action (2018) 2 copies
F-111 Aardvark In Action (2019) 2 copies
M36 Jackson 1 copy

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Reviews

14 reviews
Railway guns may be on a par with military airships; fascinating to read about but of limited utility in actual employment. This Squadron/Signal publication has all the merits and flaws of that format; intended mostly for modelers there are lots of pictures but limited information on how the equipment actually worked.


The K5(E) – officially 28cm Kanone 5 Eisenbahngeschütz – was the workhorse German WWII railway gun, with 24 produced. They were deployed along the English Channel and show more traded shots with batteries at Dover; shelled Leningrad, Sevastopol, and Stalingrad, and turned up in Italy at Anzio. “Anzio Annie” was actually a pair of guns; the Germans did cursory demolition when they retreated but American engineers were able to repair one gun with parts from another, and it’s currently on display at Aberdeen Proving Grounds. The French discovered a derelict K5(E) in a railyard in the 1970s, and that one is on show at the Atlantic Wall Museum in Pas-de-Calais.


Despite the “Detail in Action” subtitle, there is only two pictures of a K5(E) actually firing: from a railyard in Belgium in the general direction of the White Cliffs of Dover, and from an uncredited location. More than half the book is color photographs of details on the Aberdeen Proving Grounds gun, handy for modelers who want to make sure they have the right number of teeth in the elevation gears and the proper nameplates for the brake system. What information there is on employment is scattered among the picture captions. The K5(E) only had one degree of built-in traverse. If possible, the gun was fired from a turntable, which was stored disassembled on the accompanying support train. If a turntable was unavailable, the crew could lay a curved siding and fire the gun from that. The text mentions a “cross track” could be used for aiming, but provides no explanation of how that would work; googling shows the front bogie could be turned perpendicular and moved along the cross track to aim the gun.


The cross track setup raises another question; how was recoil handled? The text notes the gun had 32 inches of integral recoil travel, and some sort of small track car could be coupled to the front and provide additional recoil recovery. However, there’s no explanation on how the recoil recovery car worked, and there are no pictures of one in place. I’m of the impression that a lot of railguns handled recoil by just letting the piece slide backward along the tracks after firing and pushing it back into position with a small switch engine; however, pictures of the gun on its turntable mounting show very little room for track recoil and obviously track recoil would be impossible if the cross track setup was used. I note the K5(E) was capable of 50° elevation and some of the pictures show it elevated that high; perhaps that was one of the recoil solutions.
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An excellent photographic tour of the topsides of the museum ship USS Massachusetts. This book and the entire On Deck series is invaluable for modelers looking for that extra touch of realism. Note that "On Deck" means just that. There are only two pages devoted to the insides of the ship. Fortunately, there are a number of other books which provide coverage of the insides of the South Dakota class battleships.,
A great new version of the Squadron "In Action" series. Many new photos and drawings. A bit short, it seems, but they were always pretty thin. This one was hardbound. A little detail on RAF use, but not much, and none on other military users (though a few surprising pix of early civil PBYs.)
The US used mainly two wheeled amphibians during WWII: the 1/4-ton GPA and the 2-1/2-ton DUKW. Although the former was a Ford Motor Company product and the later carried the label of archrival General Motors, they bore a similarity due to their common designer, Roderick Stephens. Despite their shared origins and cutting-edge design, the GPA and DUKW had vastly contrasting careers. Production of the GPA, essentially an amphibious Jeep, ended in 1943, just as the career of the DUKW, a virtual show more aquatic truck, was on its way to becoming the “gold standard” by which other amphibians are still measured. After taking part in the Allied invasion of Sicily in July 1943, the DUKW went on to see action in nearly every other US amphibious landing in WWII and returned to see service during the Korean War as well. show less

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Associated Authors

Don Greer Illustrator, Cover artist
Todd Sturgell Illustrator
Melinda Turnage Illustrator
Matheu Spraggins Illustrator

Statistics

Works
269
Members
2,033
Popularity
#12,643
Rating
4.2
Reviews
13
ISBNs
338
Languages
3
Favorited
1

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