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Correct in the context of 1941 , but incorrect in a technical sense. To meet specification N.15/44 for Royal Navy use, de Havilland produced a carrier-borne variant. This resulted in 50 Sea Mosquito TR Mk 33s which featured folding wings, a thimble nose radome and fuselage hardpoints for mounting torpedoes. These were followed by 14 Sea Mosquito TR Mk 37s, which differed in having ASV Mk. XIII radar instead of the TR.33's AN/APS-6.
The Royal Navy also operated the Mosquito TT Mk 39 for target towing. A number of B.Mk XVIs bombers were converted into TT.Mk 39 target tug aircraft.
I'll rephrase that...operational bomb loads
Cheers
Steve
B-17 was basically a story in reverse. great things were expected of it from its inception in 1934, for which it could not deliver. Dogged persistence eventually got it across the line, in a vastly different form and for a completely different role for which it was originally intended. To me, there is no contest in comparing a thorouighbred like to the mossie to a near broken down hack like the B-17
The Mosquito could have ben ready for service more or less in the guise it was introduced in 1942, at least 2 years before it did
It did by carrying a special single 4,000lb bomb. It's flexibility was even more limited than the B-17s. If the Mission requirement was for large quantities of incendiaries it might take 4 Mosquitoes to carry the same load as a single B-17.
Without the 4,000lb cookie the Mosquito drops to 2,000lbs pretty quickly (or 3,000lbs with under-wing bombs).
Want to try to put 8 250lb incendiaries in a Mosquito? 1/2 the load the B-17 carried. How about 4 500lb bombs (easy) plus 10 65lb incendiaries? oops, two Mosquitos could carry the eight 500lb bombs but you need a third with appropriate bomb racks to carry the 20 incendiary bombs.
On the other hand if you need a 4000lb blast bomb the B-17 is no good, the only way it can carry one is outside. Not bad if the target is in coastal France but otherwise it pretty much a no-go.
The B-17 had trouble carrying the quantities and types of incendiaries wanted for some targets. The B-17 is often over rated by claiming it carry 12,800lbs inside, it could but the load was pretty useless, eight 1600lb AP bombs that each carried only bit less explosive than a 500lb GP bomb. Something like under 300 of these bombs were dropped in Europe during the war but many US aircraft have their max bomb load calculated by using them (P-61 could carry 4).
Plan fact is the Mosquito could not replace the B-17 on a one for one basis and could not do it on a 2 for one basis either using many common bomb loads due to the volume the bombs took up, not the weight.
Going by weight alone disregards the limits the bomb bays put on various aircraft in regards to flexibility. British sort of had the same problem with some of their bombers in reverse. Lots of little bomb bays/bomb/cells out in the wings that could hold 250lb bombs but once they decided they wanted heavier bombs the bays/cells became so much wasted space. Too small to put the equivalent weight of 500lb bombs in and because the bomb doors were often held shut by rubber bungee cords lighter bombs or small bomb carriers could not be used in those positions.
See: Aerial Bombs
for bombs used (which changed with time) and recommendations as to which type to use on which targets (without after the war studies.)
The maximum bomb load for a Mosquito B.XVI was 5000lb - 1 x 4000lb + 2 x 500lb.
There is alos the "Avro 6 store carrier" of which there are many references but little evidence. This would have enabled 6 x 500lb bombs internally plus the two externally.
The Mosquito could certainly carry the 400lb and 500lb incendiary bombs, which were similar in size to the 500lb MC bomb. They coudl also carry a pair of 160lb/250lb Small Bomb Containers which had the smaller incendiaries. Not sure on the mid sized IBs.
Now to equal the bomb tonnage dropped by the B-17s on this raid you would need 800 Mosquitoes carrying two 1000lb apiece inside and a pair of 500lb M-17 Incendiary clusters under wing with an additional 162 Mosquitoes carrying six 500lb M-17 Incendiary clusters each.
De Havilland were saying for two years before they did that they could build a war winner, but were constantly denied permission. They eventually received some support from a few very courageous officers in the RAF, and from there were able to force the issue by the sheer brilliance of the design.
B-17s were what they were.....a heavy bomber operating at high altitude plastering bombs on a city in order to flatten that city. RAF used them to a limited extent for spoofing and LR ASW work. Point is, arguing that the B-17 was more flexible than a mosquito because it had the greater choice of bombs has to be one of the most misplaced arguments Ive ever seen in this place.
Mosquito was a far more flexible aircraft than the B-17 could ever hope to be. Lets list some of its capabilities
In case its not speaking clearly enough, I totally reject the contention that the B-17 was a more flexible, or even a more useful aircraft than the Mosquito. you have got to be kidding
"one of most misplaced arguments Ive ever seen in this place."
....If an error of judgement occurred it lay in not pursuing the four engine bomber from the outset