Shortround6
Major General
Well, in France, the Hurricanes that were supposed to escort the Battles seldom showed up on time (or in the right place) leaving the Battles pretty much on their own.Not at all. The Yak-1 was designed as an escort fighter for the Il-2. You need both, a short range escort fighter and a heavily armed assault aircraft.
The Battles also tended to be used in dribs and drabs, seldom were large numbers of planes organized for even important raids. But the bulk of the Battles lost were lost trying to take out the Bridges at Sedan. After Sedan there weren't enough left to send out out in numbers,
From wiki and bit disjointed. The fight was pretty much one day.
May 14th
" No. 103 Squadron and No. 150 Squadron RAF of the RAF Advanced Air Striking Force (AASF) flew 10 sorties against the targets in the early morning. In the process they suffered only one loss in a forced landing. Between 15:00–16:00, 71 RAF bombers took off escorted by Allied fighters. The impressive escort was offset by the presence of German fighter units that outnumbered the Allied escort fighters by 3:1.[59] No. 71 Wing RAF lost 10 Fairey Battles and five Bristol Blenheims. No. 75 Wing RAF lost 14–18 Battles and No. 76 Wing RAF lost 11 Battles.[59] Out of 71 bombers dispatched, 40–44 bombers were lost, meaning a loss rate of 56–62 percent.[59] The AASF lost a further five Hawker Hurricanes.[59] The AASF flew 81 sorties and lost 52 percent of its strength. No 2 Group RAF also contributed with 28 sorties.[60] The bombing results were poor, with three bridges damaged and one possibly destroyed.[59] "
later
"The Allied bombers received mostly poor protection. Only 93 fighter sorties, (60 by the French) were flown.[46] The French lost 21 fighters in the operation.[46] The German air defence was soon reinforced by Jagdgeschwader 26 and Jagdgeschwader 27 (Fighter Wings 26 and 27).[60] One of the premier German fighter units responsible for the heavy loss rate was Jagdgeschwader 53 (Fighter Wing 53), who later engaged French bombers who tried to succeed where the AASF failed. The attacks failed as they were uncoordinated. Along with fighter aircraft, the Germans had assembled powerful flak concentrations in Sedan. The FlaK battalions of the 1st, 2nd and 10th Panzer Divisions numbered 303 anti-aircraft guns.[67] This force was built around the 102nd FlaK Regiment with its 88 mm, 37 mm, and rapid fire 20 mm weapons.[5] So heavy was the defensive fire that the Allied bombers could not concentrate over the target. Allied bomber pilots called it "hell along the Meuse".[67] On 14 May, the Allies flew 250 sorties, the French losing 30 (another source states 21)[46] and the RAF losing 20 fighter aircraft.[9] Another 65 were heavily damaged.[9] Out of 109 RAF bombers dispatched, 47 were shot down.[9] This meant 167 aircraft had been lost against one target.[9] Bruno Loerzer called 14 May "the day of the fighter"
The Battles and Blenheims may have been using 250lbs bombs against the bridges (four per aircraft?) although the Blenheim could carry a pair of 500lbs as an alternative.
IL-2s usually carried 50kg (110lb bombs) and sometimes 100kg bombs (220lb) which would be the weapon of choice against bridges. The Russian cannon/ machine guns and rockets are not likely to make a major impression on a bridge.
Perhaps somebody can correct that but I will stand by saying swapping IL-2s for Battles would not have changed things much (somewhat fewer losses perhaps but perhaps even less damage to the Bridges?
and 303 AA guns (even if some are 7.9mm machine guns ) was a very high density of guns for most ot the early part of the war.